Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models

Trust plays a central role in the effectiveness of work groups and teams. This is the case for both face-to-face and virtual teams. Yet little is known about the development of trust in virtual teams. We examined cognitive and affective trust and their relationship to team effectiveness as reflected...

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Main Authors: Michael D. Coovert, Evgeniya E. Pavlova Miller, Winston Bennett Jr.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-08-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/3/87
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spelling doaj-0a8789439b3e490a85d73a3e6c4ee3fe2020-11-25T00:17:05ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602017-08-01638710.3390/socsci6030087socsci6030087Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score ModelsMichael D. Coovert0Evgeniya E. Pavlova Miller1Winston Bennett Jr.2Department of Psychology, University of South Florida; Tampa, FL 33620, USAState Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, Atlanta, GA 30346, USAAir Force Research Laboratory, Airman Systems Directorate; Dayton, OH 45433, USATrust plays a central role in the effectiveness of work groups and teams. This is the case for both face-to-face and virtual teams. Yet little is known about the development of trust in virtual teams. We examined cognitive and affective trust and their relationship to team effectiveness as reflected through satisfaction with one’s team and task performance. Latent growth curve analysis reveals both trust types start at a significant level with individual differences in that initial level. Cognitive trust follows a linear growth pattern while affective trust is overall non-linear, but becomes linear once established. Latent change score models are utilized to examine change in trust and also its relationship with satisfaction with the team and team performance. In examining only change in trust and its relationship to satisfaction there appears to be a straightforward influence of trust on satisfaction and satisfaction on trust. However, when incorporated into a bivariate coupling latent change model the dynamics of the relationship are revealed. A similar pattern holds for trust and task performance; however, in the bivariate coupling change model a more parsimonious representation is preferred.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/3/87trustteamslatent growthlatent change scoresdistributed teamscognitiveaffective
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael D. Coovert
Evgeniya E. Pavlova Miller
Winston Bennett Jr.
spellingShingle Michael D. Coovert
Evgeniya E. Pavlova Miller
Winston Bennett Jr.
Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models
Social Sciences
trust
teams
latent growth
latent change scores
distributed teams
cognitive
affective
author_facet Michael D. Coovert
Evgeniya E. Pavlova Miller
Winston Bennett Jr.
author_sort Michael D. Coovert
title Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models
title_short Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models
title_full Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models
title_fullStr Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Trust and Effectiveness in Virtual Teams: Latent Growth Curve and Latent Change Score Models
title_sort assessing trust and effectiveness in virtual teams: latent growth curve and latent change score models
publisher MDPI AG
series Social Sciences
issn 2076-0760
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Trust plays a central role in the effectiveness of work groups and teams. This is the case for both face-to-face and virtual teams. Yet little is known about the development of trust in virtual teams. We examined cognitive and affective trust and their relationship to team effectiveness as reflected through satisfaction with one’s team and task performance. Latent growth curve analysis reveals both trust types start at a significant level with individual differences in that initial level. Cognitive trust follows a linear growth pattern while affective trust is overall non-linear, but becomes linear once established. Latent change score models are utilized to examine change in trust and also its relationship with satisfaction with the team and team performance. In examining only change in trust and its relationship to satisfaction there appears to be a straightforward influence of trust on satisfaction and satisfaction on trust. However, when incorporated into a bivariate coupling latent change model the dynamics of the relationship are revealed. A similar pattern holds for trust and task performance; however, in the bivariate coupling change model a more parsimonious representation is preferred.
topic trust
teams
latent growth
latent change scores
distributed teams
cognitive
affective
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/3/87
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