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Multicenter Study
Perceptions of organizational politics as a moderator of the relationship between conscientiousness and job performance.
- W A Hochwarter, L A Witt, and K M Kacmar.
- Department of Management, University of Alabama, USA.
- J Appl Psychol. 2000 Jun 1; 85 (3): 472-8.
AbstractMeta-analytic studies of the relationships between the five-factor model of personality constructs and job performance indicate that conscientiousness has been the most consistent predictor. Recent research has sought to identify situational factors that may explain additional variance beyond what has been reported by simple bivariate relationships. The authors hypothesized that perceptions of organizational politics would moderate the relationship between conscientiousness and job performance. Data collected from 234 male and 579 female workers in 4 organizations indicated that conscientiousness was related to job performance among workers perceiving average to high levels of organizational politics but unrelated to performance among workers perceiving low levels of organizational politics. Moreover, perceptions of organizational politics were negatively related to job performance only among workers of average to low levels of conscientiousness.
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