情境对领导者奖惩行为的调节:事实还是虚构?

Philip M. Podsakoff, William D. Todor, Richard A. Grover, Vandra L. Huber
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引用次数: 455

摘要

许多当代领导力模型的一个共同假设是,情境变量调节了领导者行为和下属反应之间的关系。然而,最近R. J. House和J. L. Baetz(1979)在B. Staw &卡明斯,埃德。,《组织行为学研究》(第1卷),康涅狄格州格林威治,JAI出版社)提出,一些领导特质和行为的影响可能相对不变;也就是说,在各种情况下都有相同的效果。一种可能在不同情况下产生相对一致影响的领导行为是那些被称为领导奖惩行为的行为。本研究报告的第一个目标是增加我们对领导者偶然和非偶然奖罚行为与下属反应之间关系的理解。偶然奖励行为与下属绩效和满意度的关系最为显著,其次是非偶然惩罚行为。除非偶然奖励行为与下属工作满意度呈负相关外,领导者非偶然奖励行为和偶然惩罚行为与下属绩效和满意度均无显著相关性。本研究的第二个目的是考察各种潜在调节因子对领导奖罚行为与下属反应之间关系的影响。本研究结果表明,领导奖惩行为与下属绩效之间的关系相对不存在调节效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Situational moderators of leader reward and punishment behaviors: Fact or fiction?

One assumption shared by many contemporary models of leadership is that situational variables moderate the relationships between leader behaviors and subordinate responses. Recently, however, R. J. House and J. L. Baetz (1979 in B. Staw & L. Cummings, Eds., Research in Organizational Behavior (Vol. 1), Greenwich, Connecticut, JAI Press) have suggested that the effects of some leader traits and behaviors may be relatively invariant; that is, have the same effects in a variety of situations. One possible class of leader behaviors which may have relatively consistent effects across situations are those known as leader reward and punishment behaviors. The first goal of the research reported here was to increase our understanding of the relationships between leader contingent and noncontingent reward and punishment behaviors and subordinate responses. Contingent reward behavior was found to have the most pronounced relationships with subordinate performance and satisfaction, followed by noncontingent punishment behavior. Neither leader noncontingent reward nor contingent punishment behavior were found to be related to either subordinate performance or satisfaction, with the exception that noncontingent reward behavior was negatively related to subordinates' satisfaction with work. The second goal of the research was to examine the effects of a variety of potential moderators on the relationships between leader reward and punishment behaviors and subordinate responses. The results of this study suggest that the relationships between leader reward and punishment behaviors and subordinates' performance are relatively free of moderating effects.

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