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Functional relations among constructs in the same content domain at different levels of analysis: A typology of composition models.
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48
References
1998
Year
Concept FormationMultilevel ResearchProject ManagementComposition ApproachComposition ModelsSame Content DomainSemanticsOrganizational BehaviorOrganisational Structure EvaluationManagementConstructivismLanguage StudiesDesignPrinciple Of CompositionalityOrganizational ResearchCompositionalityDifferent LevelsOrganizational CommunicationOrganizational StructureOrganizational ModelBusinessWork Group DynamicFunctional RelationsLinguistics
Composition models specify the functional relationships among phenomena or constructs at different levels of analysis (e.g., individual level, team level, organizational level) that reference essentially the same content but that are qualitatively different at different levels (M. T. Hannan, 1971; K. H. Roberts, C. L. Hulin, & D. M. Rousseau, 1978; D. M. Rousseau, 1985). Specifying adequate composition models is a critical component of good multilevel research. A typology of composition models is proposed to provide a framework for organizing, evaluating, and developing constructs and theories in multilevel research. Five basic forms of composition are described and illustrated. Implications of the typology are discussed.
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