Publication | Closed Access
New measures of job control, cognitive demand, and production responsibility.
481
Citations
40
References
1993
Year
Job PerformanceEducationHuman Resource ManagementPerformance Measurement SystemsClassical Test TheoryConfirmatory Factor AnalysesWorker Well-beingOrganizational BehaviorWork AdjustmentProductivityEmployee AttitudeManagementTest–retest ReliabilitiesFactor AnalysisWork AttitudeHospitality IndustryJob SatisfactionWorkforce ProductivityPerformance StudiesJob ControlBusinessProduction Responsibility
Recent research has highlighted several job characteristics salient to employee well-being and behavior for which there are no adequate generally applicable measures. These include timing and method control, monitoring and problem-solving demand, and production responsibility. In this article, an attempt to develop measures of these constructs provided encouraging results. Confirmatory factor analyses applied to data from 2 samples of shop-floor employees showed a consistent fit to a common 5-factor measurement model. Scales corresponding to each of the dimensions showed satisfactory internal and test–retest reliabilities. As expected, the scales also discriminated between employees in different jobs and employees working with contrasting technologies.
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