International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology 2011, Volume 26 By
2011 | 362 Pages | ISBN: 0470971746 | PDF | 4 MB
2011 | 362 Pages | ISBN: 0470971746 | PDF | 4 MB
The twenty-sixth volume in the most prestigious series of annual volumes in the field of industrial and organizational psychology, providing authoritative and integrative reviews of the key literature in the field All chapters written by established experts and all topics carefully chosen to reflect the major concerns in both the research literature and in current practice Presents developments in such established areas as stress and well-being, consumer behavior, employee trust, deception and applicant faking, the assessment of job performance and work attitudes, and the employment interview Newer topics explored include methodological issues in the development and evaluation of multiple regression models, and the psychological impact of the physical office environment Each chapter offers a comprehensive and critical survey of the chosen topic, and each is supported by a valuable bibliography Content: Chapter 1 Stress and Well?Being are Still Issues and Something Still Needs to be Done: Or Why Agency and Interpretation are Important for Policy and Practice (pages 1–45): Kevin DanielsChapter 2 Brain, Emotion, and Contingency in the Explanation of Consumer Behaviour (pages 47–91): Gordon R. FoxallChapter 3 Longitudinal Assessment of Changes in Job Performance and Work Attitudes: Conceptual and Methodological Issues (pages 93–117): David ChanChapter 4 Estimating the Relative Importance of Variables in Multiple Regression Models (pages 119–141): Dina Krasikova, James M. LeBreton and Scott TonidandelChapter 5 Employee Trust in Organizational Contexts (pages 143–191): Rosalind Searle, Antoinette Weibel and Deanne N. Den HartogChapter 6 The Physical Environment of the Office: Contemporary and Emerging Issues (pages 193–237): Matthew C. Davis, Desmond J. Leach and Chris W. CleggChapter 7 Deception and Applicant Faking: Putting the Pieces Together (pages 181–217): Brian H. KimChapter 8 Actions Speak Too: Uncovering Possible Implicit and Explicit Discrimination in the Employment Interview Process (pages 293–337): Therese Macan and Stephanie Merritt