Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations

Interpersonal circumplex (IPC) inventories assess a range of dispositions but can condense and compare their findings within a circular model defined by two factors: agency and communion. Whereas other IPC inventories assess individuals, the current research introduces IPC inventories assessing the...

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Main Author: Kenneth D. Locke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00850/full
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spelling doaj-db1d6d85a9d6430998d701571e6e44172020-11-25T01:14:46ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782019-05-011010.3389/fpsyg.2019.00850450889Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and OrganizationsKenneth D. LockeInterpersonal circumplex (IPC) inventories assess a range of dispositions but can condense and compare their findings within a circular model defined by two factors: agency and communion. Whereas other IPC inventories assess individuals, the current research introduces IPC inventories assessing the interpersonal culture (interaction and communication norms) characterizing an entire organization or team—namely, the Circumplex Culture Scan (CCS) and Circumplex Team Scan (CTS). Across an initial development sample (n = 1676), online validation sample (CCS, n = 808; CTS, n = 832), and onsite validation sample (CCS, n = 516 respondents from 21 organizations; CTS, n = 347 respondents from 38 teams), the eight 8-item CCS/CTS octant scales demonstrated good internal consistencies, circumplex properties, reliable within-group agreement and between-group variance (thus justifying aggregation across an organization/team), and convergent, discriminant, and incremental validity in relation to other measures. According to their members, the organizations/teams with the most satisfied members and customers/clients were organizations/teams with considerably stronger communal (e.g., being open and respectful) than uncommunal (e.g., being rude and guarded) norms and somewhat stronger agentic (e.g., being eager and assertive) than unagentic (e.g., being cautious and quiet) norms. The CCS/CTS complements existing IPC and organizational culture measures and helps bridge the IPC and organizational literatures.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00850/fullinterpersonal circumplexorganizational culturesocial normsscale developmentagencycommunion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kenneth D. Locke
spellingShingle Kenneth D. Locke
Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations
Frontiers in Psychology
interpersonal circumplex
organizational culture
social norms
scale development
agency
communion
author_facet Kenneth D. Locke
author_sort Kenneth D. Locke
title Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations
title_short Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations
title_full Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations
title_fullStr Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations
title_full_unstemmed Development and Validation of a Circumplex Measure of the Interpersonal Culture in Work Teams and Organizations
title_sort development and validation of a circumplex measure of the interpersonal culture in work teams and organizations
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Interpersonal circumplex (IPC) inventories assess a range of dispositions but can condense and compare their findings within a circular model defined by two factors: agency and communion. Whereas other IPC inventories assess individuals, the current research introduces IPC inventories assessing the interpersonal culture (interaction and communication norms) characterizing an entire organization or team—namely, the Circumplex Culture Scan (CCS) and Circumplex Team Scan (CTS). Across an initial development sample (n = 1676), online validation sample (CCS, n = 808; CTS, n = 832), and onsite validation sample (CCS, n = 516 respondents from 21 organizations; CTS, n = 347 respondents from 38 teams), the eight 8-item CCS/CTS octant scales demonstrated good internal consistencies, circumplex properties, reliable within-group agreement and between-group variance (thus justifying aggregation across an organization/team), and convergent, discriminant, and incremental validity in relation to other measures. According to their members, the organizations/teams with the most satisfied members and customers/clients were organizations/teams with considerably stronger communal (e.g., being open and respectful) than uncommunal (e.g., being rude and guarded) norms and somewhat stronger agentic (e.g., being eager and assertive) than unagentic (e.g., being cautious and quiet) norms. The CCS/CTS complements existing IPC and organizational culture measures and helps bridge the IPC and organizational literatures.
topic interpersonal circumplex
organizational culture
social norms
scale development
agency
communion
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00850/full
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