Publication | Closed Access
Polychronicity and the Inventory of Polychronic Values (IPV)
361
Citations
33
References
1999
Year
MeasurementPolychronic ValuesIndividual DifferencesEducationPsychometricsClassical Test TheoryOrganizational BehaviorPsychologySocial SciencesManagementEconomic AnalysisConstruct ValidityFactor AnalysisPsychological EvaluationStatisticsWork AttitudeQuantitative ManagementDataset CreationData SetCross-cultural AssessmentContent AdequacyTechnologyTen‐item InventoryPsychological Measurement
The ten‐item Inventory of Polychronic Values (IPV), a psychometric measure of polychronicity (the extent to which people in a culture prefer to be engaged in two or more tasks or events simultaneously and believe their preference is the best way to do things), was developed using data from 11 samples (N = 2,190) collected from bank employees, undergraduate students, hospital personnel, dentists and their staffs, and state agency managers. Principal components, alpha, correlation, and confirmatory factor analyses supported the IPV in its internal consistency, test‐retest reliability, content adequacy, construct validity (both discriminant and convergent), and nomological validity.
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