Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures

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Standard

Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures. / Lvina, E.; Johns, G.; Treadway, D.C.; Blickle, G.; Liu, Y.L.; Liu, J.; Atay, S.; Zettler, Ingo; Solga, J.; Noethen, D.; Ferris, G.R.

I: International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, Bind 12, Nr. 2, 01.08.2012, s. 171-191.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lvina, E, Johns, G, Treadway, DC, Blickle, G, Liu, YL, Liu, J, Atay, S, Zettler, I, Solga, J, Noethen, D & Ferris, GR 2012, 'Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures', International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, bind 12, nr. 2, s. 171-191. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470595812439870

APA

Lvina, E., Johns, G., Treadway, D. C., Blickle, G., Liu, Y. L., Liu, J., Atay, S., Zettler, I., Solga, J., Noethen, D., & Ferris, G. R. (2012). Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures. International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, 12(2), 171-191. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470595812439870

Vancouver

Lvina E, Johns G, Treadway DC, Blickle G, Liu YL, Liu J o.a. Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures. International Journal of Cross Cultural Management. 2012 aug. 1;12(2):171-191. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470595812439870

Author

Lvina, E. ; Johns, G. ; Treadway, D.C. ; Blickle, G. ; Liu, Y.L. ; Liu, J. ; Atay, S. ; Zettler, Ingo ; Solga, J. ; Noethen, D. ; Ferris, G.R. / Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures. I: International Journal of Cross Cultural Management. 2012 ; Bind 12, Nr. 2. s. 171-191.

Bibtex

@article{d2f56e032b5247a49fd8e6014e528fae,
title = "Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures",
abstract = "This research expands the study of political skill, a construct developed in North America, to other cultures. We examine the psychometric properties of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) and test the measurement equivalence of the scale in a non-American context. Respondents were 1511 employees from China, Germany, Russia, Turkey, and the United States. The cross-cultural generalizability of the construct is established through consistent evidence of multi-group invariance in an increasingly stringent series of analyses of mean and covariance structures. Overall, the study provides systematic evidence that political skill can be treated as a stable construct among diverse cultural groups. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that translated PSI measures operationalize the construct similarly. With some exceptions, the item loadings and intercepts are invariant for the US and non-US responses, suggesting partial measurement equivalence. After verifying the accuracy of item translation, we conclude that any differences can be explained by variation in the cultural value of uncertainly avoidance and cultural differences on a low-to-high context continuum. Detected dissimilarities are addressed, and some suggestions regarding the correct use across borders of the instrument by managers and researchers are provided.",
author = "E. Lvina and G. Johns and D.C. Treadway and G. Blickle and Y.L. Liu and J. Liu and S. Atay and Ingo Zettler and J. Solga and D. Noethen and G.R. Ferris",
year = "2012",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/1470595812439870",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "171--191",
journal = "International Journal of Cross Cultural Management",
issn = "1470-5958",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Measure invariance of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) across five cultures

AU - Lvina, E.

AU - Johns, G.

AU - Treadway, D.C.

AU - Blickle, G.

AU - Liu, Y.L.

AU - Liu, J.

AU - Atay, S.

AU - Zettler, Ingo

AU - Solga, J.

AU - Noethen, D.

AU - Ferris, G.R.

PY - 2012/8/1

Y1 - 2012/8/1

N2 - This research expands the study of political skill, a construct developed in North America, to other cultures. We examine the psychometric properties of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) and test the measurement equivalence of the scale in a non-American context. Respondents were 1511 employees from China, Germany, Russia, Turkey, and the United States. The cross-cultural generalizability of the construct is established through consistent evidence of multi-group invariance in an increasingly stringent series of analyses of mean and covariance structures. Overall, the study provides systematic evidence that political skill can be treated as a stable construct among diverse cultural groups. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that translated PSI measures operationalize the construct similarly. With some exceptions, the item loadings and intercepts are invariant for the US and non-US responses, suggesting partial measurement equivalence. After verifying the accuracy of item translation, we conclude that any differences can be explained by variation in the cultural value of uncertainly avoidance and cultural differences on a low-to-high context continuum. Detected dissimilarities are addressed, and some suggestions regarding the correct use across borders of the instrument by managers and researchers are provided.

AB - This research expands the study of political skill, a construct developed in North America, to other cultures. We examine the psychometric properties of the Political Skill Inventory (PSI) and test the measurement equivalence of the scale in a non-American context. Respondents were 1511 employees from China, Germany, Russia, Turkey, and the United States. The cross-cultural generalizability of the construct is established through consistent evidence of multi-group invariance in an increasingly stringent series of analyses of mean and covariance structures. Overall, the study provides systematic evidence that political skill can be treated as a stable construct among diverse cultural groups. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that translated PSI measures operationalize the construct similarly. With some exceptions, the item loadings and intercepts are invariant for the US and non-US responses, suggesting partial measurement equivalence. After verifying the accuracy of item translation, we conclude that any differences can be explained by variation in the cultural value of uncertainly avoidance and cultural differences on a low-to-high context continuum. Detected dissimilarities are addressed, and some suggestions regarding the correct use across borders of the instrument by managers and researchers are provided.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84865259878&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1177/1470595812439870

DO - 10.1177/1470595812439870

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84865259878

VL - 12

SP - 171

EP - 191

JO - International Journal of Cross Cultural Management

JF - International Journal of Cross Cultural Management

SN - 1470-5958

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 100998602