Publications by authors named "Michael J Wesson"

Article Synopsis
  • Recent research has intensified interest in justice literature, particularly highlighting social exchange theory and affect as key frameworks for understanding responses to justice.
  • A meta-analysis of 493 independent samples demonstrated that justice affects task performance and citizenship behavior through social exchange quality indicators like trust and organizational commitment, while no similar mediation was found for negative behaviors.
  • The findings challenge existing beliefs about the relationships between justice, performance, and whether they pertain to specific events or broader concepts, suggesting a need for future research to integrate both social exchange and affect perspectives.
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The 3 studies presented here introduce a new measure of the individual-difference form of collectivism. Psychological collectivism is conceptualized as a multidimensional construct with the following 5 facets: preference for in-groups, reliance on in-groups, concern for in-groups, acceptance of in-group norms, and prioritization of in-group goals. Study 1 developed and tested the new measure in a sample of consultants.

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The current study investigated the effects of using a computer-based orientation program on organizational socialization and attitudinal outcomes. In a quasi-experimental field study, 261 newcomers either participated in a group, social-based orientation session or an individual, computer-based orientation session. Consistent with hypotheses, results indicated that participation in the computer-based orientation session led to lower levels of socialization in the more socially rich content areas, whereas the more information-based content areas were not affected.

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Goals are central to current treatments of work motivation, and goal commitment is a critical construct in understanding the relationship between goals and performance. Inconsistency in the measurement of goal commitment hindered early research in this area but the nine-item, self-report scale developed by Hollenbeck, Williams, and Klein (1989b), and derivatives of that scale, have become the most commonly used measures of goal commitment. Despite this convergence, a few authors, based on small sample studies, have raised questions about the dimensionality of this measure.

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