A Meta-Analysis of the Relationship Between General Mental Ability and Nontask Performance

被引:86
作者
Gonzalez-Mule, Erik [1 ]
Mount, Michael K. [1 ]
Oh, In-Sue [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Iowa, Dept Management & Organizat, Henry B Tippie Coll Business, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
[2] Temple Univ, Dept Human Resource Management, Fox Sch Business, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA
关键词
general mental ability; organizational citizenship behavior; counterproductive work behavior; ORGANIZATIONAL CITIZENSHIP BEHAVIOR; COUNTERPRODUCTIVE WORK BEHAVIOR; JOB-PERFORMANCE; COGNITIVE-ABILITY; INCREMENTAL VALIDITY; PERSONALITY-TRAITS; EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE; ADAPTIVE PERFORMANCE; PERSONNEL-SELECTION; RELATIVE IMPORTANCE;
D O I
10.1037/a0037547
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Although one of the most well-established research findings in industrial-organizational psychology is that general mental ability (GMA) is a strong and generalizable predictor of job performance, this meta-analytically derived conclusion is based largely on measures of task or overall performance. The primary purpose of this study is to address a void in the research literature by conducting a meta-analysis to determine the direction and magnitude of the correlation of GMA with 2 dimensions of nontask performance: counterproductive work behaviors (CWB) and organizational citizenship behaviors (OCB). Overall, the results show that the true-score correlation between GMA and CWB is essentially 0 (-.02, k = 35), although rating source of CWB moderates this relationship. The true-score correlation between GMA and OCB is positive but modest in magnitude (. 23, k = 43). The 2nd purpose of this study is to conduct meta-analytic relative weight analyses to determine the relative importance of GMA and the five-factor model (FFM) of personality traits in predicting nontask and task performance criteria. Results indicate that, collectively, the FFM traits are substantially more important for CWB than GMA, that the FFM traits are roughly equal in importance to GMA for OCB, and that GMA is substantially more important for task and overall job performance than the FFM traits. Implications of these findings for the development of optimal selection systems and the development of comprehensive theories of job performance are discussed along with study limitation and future research directions.
引用
收藏
页码:1222 / 1243
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A Meta-Analysis of the Five-Factor Model of Personality and Academic Performance
    Poropat, Arthur E.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2009, 135 (02) : 322 - 338
  • [42] A Meta-Analysis of the Relationship Between Emotional Intelligence and Academic Performance in Secondary Education: A Multi-Stream Comparison
    Sanchez-Alvarez, Nicolas
    Berrios Martos, Maria Pilar
    Extremera, Natalio
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 11
  • [43] Revisiting the relationship between team members' personality and their team's performance: A meta-analysis
    Han, Areum
    Krieger, Florian
    Kim, Sungwon
    Nixon, Nia
    Greiff, Samuel
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN PERSONALITY, 2024, 112
  • [44] Cross-cultural Evidence of the Relationship between Subjective Well-being and Job Performance: A Meta-analysis
    Salgado, Jesus F.
    Moscoso, Silvia
    JOURNAL OF WORK AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVISTA DE PSICOLOGIA DEL TRABAJO Y DE LAS ORGANIZACIONES, 2022, 38 (01): : 27 - 42
  • [45] The relationship between insecure attachment and alexithymia: A meta-analysis
    Zhang, Juan
    Zhang, Yihan
    Mao, Yidi
    Wang, Yihui
    CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 43 (07) : 5804 - 5825
  • [46] The Relationship Between Faking and Response Latencies A Meta-Analysis
    Maricutoiu, Laurentiu P.
    Sarbescu, Paul
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT, 2019, 35 (01) : 3 - 13
  • [47] A meta-analysis of the relationship between personality traits and cyberbullying
    Xu, Weilin
    Zhao, Baobao
    Jin, Cancan
    AGGRESSION AND VIOLENT BEHAVIOR, 2024, 79
  • [48] The prediction of task and contextual performance by political skill: A meta-analysis and moderator test
    Bing, Mark N.
    Davison, H. Kristl
    Minor, Inneka
    Novicevic, Milorad M.
    Frink, Dwight D.
    JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2011, 79 (02) : 563 - 577
  • [49] Relationship between emotional intelligence and narcissism: a meta-analysis
    Nguyen, Nhu Ngoc
    Takahashi, Yoshi
    Nham, Tuan Phong
    MANAGEMENT RESEARCH REVIEW, 2022, 45 (10): : 1338 - 1353
  • [50] Emotional Intelligence Predicts Academic Performance: A Meta-Analysis
    MacCann, Carolyn
    Jiang, Yixin
    Brown, Luke E. R.
    Double, Kit S.
    Bucich, Micaela
    Minbashian, Amirali
    PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2020, 146 (02) : 150 - 186