Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research

We conducted two research studies to address the malleability of TA by manipulating situational ambiguity. Students participated in a semester-end assessment of their management skills (n = 306). In Study 1, students in low and moderate ambiguity conditions had significantly higher post-experiment T...

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Main Authors: Megan L Endres, Richaurd eCamp, Morgan eMilner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00619/full
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spelling doaj-be0b8ac9308449919f9480e0e32f4f552020-11-24T22:22:40ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782015-05-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.00619136165Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future researchMegan L Endres0Richaurd eCamp1Morgan eMilner2Eastern Michigan UniversityEastern Michigan UniversityEastern Michigan UniversityWe conducted two research studies to address the malleability of TA by manipulating situational ambiguity. Students participated in a semester-end assessment of their management skills (n = 306). In Study 1, students in low and moderate ambiguity conditions had significantly higher post-experiment TA, more positive change in self-efficacy, and marginally higher faculty ratings. In Study 2, a control group (n = 103) did not participate in the assessment and was established for comparison to the first study results. The Study 2 students reported TA significantly lower than Study 1 students in the low and moderate ambiguity conditions. The control group TA was not significantly different from that of the Study 1 high ambiguity condition. This further suggested TA’s situational malleability, as those who had controlled access to structured information appeared to have increased their TA over that observed in the other two groups. These results suggest that TA may be malleable. We review the relevant literature, offer hypotheses, report our analyses and findings, and then propose future research and potential prescriptive applications in such areas as management development, assessment, and decision-making.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00619/fullPersonalityself-efficacyexperimentAmbiguity tolerancestructured interviews
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Megan L Endres
Richaurd eCamp
Morgan eMilner
spellingShingle Megan L Endres
Richaurd eCamp
Morgan eMilner
Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
Frontiers in Psychology
Personality
self-efficacy
experiment
Ambiguity tolerance
structured interviews
author_facet Megan L Endres
Richaurd eCamp
Morgan eMilner
author_sort Megan L Endres
title Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
title_short Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
title_full Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
title_fullStr Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
title_full_unstemmed Is ambiguity tolerance malleable? Experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
title_sort is ambiguity tolerance malleable? experimental evidence with potential implications for future research
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2015-05-01
description We conducted two research studies to address the malleability of TA by manipulating situational ambiguity. Students participated in a semester-end assessment of their management skills (n = 306). In Study 1, students in low and moderate ambiguity conditions had significantly higher post-experiment TA, more positive change in self-efficacy, and marginally higher faculty ratings. In Study 2, a control group (n = 103) did not participate in the assessment and was established for comparison to the first study results. The Study 2 students reported TA significantly lower than Study 1 students in the low and moderate ambiguity conditions. The control group TA was not significantly different from that of the Study 1 high ambiguity condition. This further suggested TA’s situational malleability, as those who had controlled access to structured information appeared to have increased their TA over that observed in the other two groups. These results suggest that TA may be malleable. We review the relevant literature, offer hypotheses, report our analyses and findings, and then propose future research and potential prescriptive applications in such areas as management development, assessment, and decision-making.
topic Personality
self-efficacy
experiment
Ambiguity tolerance
structured interviews
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00619/full
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