Title: Work Relevant Affect Constructs
1Work Relevant Affect Constructs
Howard Weiss Purdue University ESRC Conference on
Work Attitude Measurement October, 2007
2Premise 1 Affect constructs are and have
been important topics in the study of
behavior (morale, satisfaction, emotion,
stress, commitment, etc.)
Premise 2 In spite of importance, confusion
rather than clarity has reigned in this area
My Goal Today To provide some organization and
clarity for this domain
3So..
Well talk about affect and what it means,
about job satisfaction and commitment, about
emotions and moods, etc.
And try to sort out all these related constructs
Plus - measurement implications
4Topics
- Attitudes and emotions in the context of job
satisfaction - Commitment
- Time frames for well being constructs
- Different criterion relationships for constructs
- Measurement
5My Overall Message Is
- We have believed were capturing much more with
job satisfaction than we actually have - We have to expand our assessment and analysis of
work experience to encompass all sorts of states
and experiences - We have to ask what do we want to know and why
- Do we have a practical bent, or
- Do we want to know what people think and feel and
experience at work - Either way were not there
6A Brief History of Research on Affect and
WorkWeiss Brief (2001)
- Research began in the 1930s, rich with true
affect constructs - Hersey (1932) Daily mood reports
- Fisher Hanna (1931) Emotional maladjustment
- Hoppock (1935) Diaries (that no one returned)
- And then there was Kornhauser and Sharpe (1932)
- Questionnaire
- Facet measurement
- Single organization
- Satisfaction-performance analysis
7A Brief History of Organizational Researchon
AffectWeiss Brief (2001)
- By the end of the decade a very narrow paradigm
developed for studying satisfaction in U.S. - Broad concept of affect became the narrow concept
of job satisfaction - The single organization survey became the method
of choice - Raw description replaced theory building
- Very applied focus held sway
- Kornhauser and Sharpe emerged victorious
8Over Time Researchers Mixed Satisfaction,
Emotion/Affect and Attitude Into One Big
Conceptual Stew
Key Definitions of Job Satisfaction
- Locke (1976)
- A pleasurable or positive emotional state
resulting from an appraisal of ones job - Cranny, Smith and Stone (1992)
- An affective (that is emotional) reaction to
ones job
9But.
- Miner (1992)
- It seems desirable to treat job satisfaction
as generally equivalent to job attitudes - Brief (1998)
- Job satisfaction is an attitude toward ones
job
10So which is it?Emotion or Attitude
- For a long time and for most researchers the
answer would be both - Attitude is emotion
- Smith, Kendal and Hulin (1969)
- Vroom (1964)
- Why?
- Little thorough conceptual attention at the start
- The tripartite model of attitudes of course
justified the mix
11Two Models of Attitude Structure
Classic Tripartite Model
Attitude
Affect
Beliefs
Behaviors
Attitude Evaluative Judgment
Newer Model
Behaviors
12What is affect?
- Definitions abound but most researchers talk
about these distinguishing characteristics
(whether mood or emotions) - Subjective experience
- Physiological changes
- Behavioral tendencies
- Time bound
- Does satisfaction (attitude have any of these
characteristics?)
13Lets look at some dataOne Managers Emotional
States
14Another Managers Emotional States
15Together
16One Graduate Student
Parents called with a birthday surprise
Was not the regular tension in lab meeting
Stats exam returned
Lunch with a friend
?
Argument with a coworker
?
Breakdown in front of advisor
nosebleed
17A Second Graduate Student
In charge of training session that got off to a
good start
Received proofs of paper in press
Good talk with advisor
Got equipment working
Best friend got job interview
Worked on writing research proposal
Officemate is leaving
Problems with equipment
18We have to remember
- That with satisfaction what we are measuring an
attitude which is an evaluative judgment about
ones job - That affective experiences both influence those
judgments but are conceptually distinct - The same is true about beliefs about ones job
19Where is the empirical evidence?
- Factor analyses separate affect from evaluations
and beliefs (when affect is measured correctly) -
ex. Crites et al. (1994) - Affect and beliefs separately and independently
predict attitudes/satisfaction - ex. Weiss, et
al. (1999)
20Lets look at some dataOne Managers Emotional
States
21Where is the empirical evidence?
- Factor analyses separate affect from evaluations
and beliefs (when affect is measured correctly) -
ex. Crites et al. (1994) - Affect and beliefs separately and independently
predict attitudes/satisfaction - ex. Weiss, et
al. (1999) - Affect and beliefs predict behavior differently
22Is this just semantics?
You can judge for yourselves
But I believe the confusion between affect and
attitudes
- Is just plain sloppy conceptualization
- Has obscured differences among important
- but related constructs
- Has contributed to the neglect
- of the study of true emotion at work
- Has contributed to the inability to find
consistent - satisfaction-performance relationships
- Has produced real measurement problems
-
23Lets look at a related set of constructs
- Meyer and Allen describe three types of
commitment - Affective commitment
- Normative commitment
- Continuance commitment
- But, what Meyer and Allen call affective
commitment has very little affect in it. Mostly
its about value congruence and identity.
Important but not affect
24Finding Affect in Affective Commitment
- Objectives
- Validate partition of affective commitment
dimension - Begin development of new measure
- Method
- Large single organization survey
25Finding Affect in Affective Commitment
- Some results
- Five factor model is best fit to data
- Affective
- Value congruence/identity
- Normative
- Alternatives
- Investments
- Affective commitment and value congruence were
highly correlated but had independent,
significant relationships with ITL - Daily hassles predicted the affective commitment
when value congruence was controlled for but did
not predict value congruence when affective
commitment was controlled for
26Final Items for Index
- Affective Commitment (a .87)
- Generally, on a day-to-day basis, I am happy with
my work at -----. - I enjoy working at -----.
- Generally, on a day-to-day basis, I am proud to
an employee of ----. - Commitment through Value Congruence (a .85)
- I feel like being an employee of ---- can help me
achieve what I want in life. - I really feel as if ------ values are my own.
- Working at ------ is consistent with my personal
goals. - Commitment through Investments (a .76)
- If I left ------, I would feel like I'm starting
all over again. - It would be difficult for me to leave ------- and
give up the benefits available in -----. - I continue to work at ---- because leaving would
require considerable sacrifice. - Commitment through Alternatives (a .85)
- I would have difficulty finding a good job if I
left -----. - One of the problems with leaving ------- would be
the lack of available alternatives. - Normative Commitment (a .75)
- I would feel guilty if I left ------.
- I would not leave -------- now because I have a
sense of obligation to the people here. - If I left -------, I would feel like I had let
people down.
27Finding Affect in Affective Commitment
- In another study with teachers using our scale
- Affective Commitment correlated with burnout but
Value Congruence did not - Overall, I think we can distinguish between a
commitment based on daily experiences/happiness,
etc. and a commitment based on identity,
perceived fit or value congruence. - But this is very preliminary, particularly the
measurement
28A Preliminary Taxonomy
To fully assess the nature of life at work we
have to assess all three families
What people think and feel
29Lets Briefly Talk About The Time Frames of
Constructs
- Constructs with time frame indeterminate (time
frame not part of construct definition) - Satisfaction
- Well being
- Constructs with longer episodes
- Loneliness
- Depression
- Stress (?)
- Constructs with shorter episodes
- Emotion
- Mood
- Stress (?)
30A Preliminary Taxonomy
To fully assess the nature of life at work we
have to assess all three families
What people think and feel
31Q. Why is this important?A. Different
Performance Relationships
- The satisfaction-performance relationship has
been the Holy Grail of work research - But now we see its not one cup but (at least)
three cups - One cup holds the effects of evaluations on work
behaviors - One cup holds the effects of beliefs
- One cup holds the effects affective states
32Another way to look at it
Judgment Driven Behaviors
Features
Beliefs
Affective Experiences
Satisfaction
Events
Affect Driven Behaviors
Weiss and Cropanzano, 1996
33What are measurement implications? Lets
brainstorm a bit
- At the very least, we need separate measures of
affective experiences, beliefs, evaluations. - Each will have something to say about work
experience - Each will predict something important about work
behaviors - I think we have to carefully understand the
relevant states of being among workers, both
momentary and elongated
34What are measurement implications? Lets
brainstorm a bit
- Surveys are very good for some things, very
limited for others - Theyre good at the evaluation part, the belief
part. - They my be OK at the state of being part
(telling whether you feel bored or depressed,
etc.) - Theyre very limited at capturing experiences and
events (frequency of this or that, etc.) - Over time people stop thinking episodically and
start thinking semantically
35In conclusion
- The measurement of affect and attitude among
workers has been characterized by imprecise
conceptual development - Precision will breed better measurement and
better utility
Thank You