Psychology Lecture No - 14
Psychology Lecture No - 14
Psychology Lecture No - 14
Chapter 13 Industrial-Organizational
Study Guide
Industrial-Organizational psychology studies how human behavior and psychology effect work and how they are
affected by work. I-0 psychologists can work in numerous fields including: academia, government, consulting
firms and business.
I-O psychology can be broken down into three main areas of study:
1. Industrial psychology – selecting and evaluating employees.
2. Organizational psychology – the social dimension of work.
3. Human Factors psychology – workplace design.
Historical Development
I-O psychology originated in the early 20th century with industrial psychology and the use of psychological
concepts to aid in personnel selection. The birth of industrial psychology lies with three students of Wilhelm
Wundt. Walter Dill Scott was one of the first psychologists to apply psychology to advertising, management and
personnel selection. Hugo Munsterberg studied employee selection, employee training, and effective
advertising, while James Cattell founded the Psychological Corporation, a psychological consulting company.
Research such as the Hawthorne study found that productivity was affected more by human interaction and not
physical factors.
● This study noticed that an individual’s performance increased when they were being observed, a
dynamic now known as the Hawthorne effect. Findings such as these caused the field to expand with
the introduction of organizational psychology.
Organizational psychology was also influenced by both WWI and WWII. During this time, psychologists (Yerkes,
Scott, and Bingham) were assigned to tasks which led to the development of tests and research in how the
psychological concepts could assist industry and other areas.
In the field of human factors psychology, influential psychologists include Frederick Taylor, who focused on
redesigning the workplace to increase productivity, and Lilian Gilbreth, known as the mother of modern
management. Gilbreth studied efficiency improvements that reduced the number of motions required to
perform a task. She is credited with the idea of putting shelves on the inside of refrigerator doors and foot-
pedal-operated garbage cans. Her research also led to the finding that many employees were motivated by
money and job satisfaction.
Questions:
1. Why is it important to examine how human behavior and psychology affect work and how they are
affected by work?
2. In which contexts do industrial and organizational psychologists work?
3. What degrees do I-O psychologists hold?
4. What is the difference between industrial and organizational psychology?
5. How does Human Factors Psychology compare with industrial and organizational psychology?
6. What is an example from your own life in which human factors psychology may have an influence?
7. What does occupational health psychology (OHP) deal with?
8. What types of jobs do professionals from the field of I-O psychology hold? (hint: see table 13.1)
9. Who were the early psychologists who studied issues related to I-O?
10. How did the work of psychologist working on disciplines related to I-O contributed to military efforts
during WWI?
11. What did Elton Mayo and his colleagues find in their research about the work place environment?
12. What does the term Hawthorne effect refer to?
13. Why is it important to control for the Hawthorne-effect in experiments?
14. Who is responsible for coining the term group dynamics and how did they study it?
15. What did Taylor’s book “The Principles of Scientific Management” described?
16. How did Lilian Gilbreth find ways to increase productivity?
This branch of I-0 psychology focuses on hiring and maintaining employees by studying job characteristics,
applicant characteristics, and how to match them. These procedures include job analysis, applicant testing (e.g.,
personality tests, IQ tests, integrity tests, and physical tests) and interviews. It also studies and implements
employee training procedures for new employees such as orientation and mentoring as well as on-going
training for employees.
Research also focuses on evaluating employees and designing performance appraisal systems. Performance
appraisal is the evaluation of an employee’s success or lack of success at performing the duties of the job. One
type of performance appraisal system is the 360-degree feedback appraisal, in which, supervisors, customers,
direct reports, peers, and the employee himself rate an employee’s performance.
This branch also considers issues of legality regarding discrimination in hiring. Many laws exist to prevent hiring
based on various group-membership criteria (e.g., gender, religion, and age). The U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity (EEOC) is responsible for enforcing federal laws that make it illegal to discriminate against a job
applicant or an employee because of their group-membership. Industrial psychologists develop methods for
avoiding bias and adhering to the law in hiring.
Job Advertising
Job analysis – accurately describing the task/job.
• Task-oriented – lists in detail the tasks that will be performed for the job.
• Worker-oriented – describes characteristics required of the worker to successfully perform the job (e.g.,
knowledge, skills, abilities).
Interviews can be influenced by social factors and body language such as the degree of similarity of the
applicant to the interviewer and nonverbal behaviors (e.g., hand gestures, head nodding, and smiling).
• Research found that lack of eye contact and smiling lead to lower applicant ratings.
Unstructured interview:
• Different questions for different candidates.
• Questions are usually unspecified beforehand.
Structured interview:
• Same questions for every candidate.
• Questions are prepared in advance.
• Standardized rating system for each response.
• More effective at predicting subsequent job performance of the job candidate.
Orientation:
• Training usually begins with an orientation period during which a new employee learns about company
policies, practices, and culture.
• Educates the new employee about the organizational culture, the values, visions, hierarchies, norms and
ways the company’s employees interact.
Mentoring:
• Experienced employee guides the work of a new employee.
• Mentors may be formally assigned or develop informally.
Selecting candidates based on group membership, when it does not directly affect potential job performance, is
discriminatory.
• Many laws exist to prevent hiring based on various group-membership criteria.
• Pregnancy, religion, and age are some of the criteria on which hiring decisions cannot legally be made.
Questions:
SELECTING EMPLOYEES
EVALUATING EMPLOYEES
10. What are performance appraisals and why are they important?
11. Describe how a 360-degree system works:
This branch of I-0 psychology focuses on the social dimension of work by studying interactions between people
working in organizations and effects of those interactions on productivity.
● A major area of interest is job satisfaction and its determinants and outcomes. Job satisfaction results
from how we think and feel about our work, and is influenced by the work itself, our personality, and
our culture.
● The most strongly predictive factor of overall job satisfaction is work content (variety, challenge, role
clarity), whereas financial rewards was found to have the weakest correlation.
● Job stress negatively impacts job satisfaction and can result from numerous stressors in an occupation
such as work overload, discrimination, and lack of career progress.
● A primary job stressor is lack of job security which can result from job threats such as downsizing
(number of employees is reduced) and corporate mergers (the joining of two organizations).
Other areas of interest include work-life balance (sources of work-family conflict and how to reduce it),
teamwork, motivation, commitment, management and leadership styles.
Douglas McGregor (1960) combined scientific management and human relations into the notion of leadership
behavior. Scientific management is a theory of management that analyzes and synthesizes workflows with the
main objective of improving economic efficiency, especially labor productivity. McGregor identified two styles of
managers:
● Theory X - managers who assume workers are inherently lazy and unproductive; managers must have
control and use punishment.
● Theory Y – managers who assume workers are people who seek to work hard and productively;
managers and workers can find creative solutions to problems; workers do not need to be controlled
and punished.
● Bass (1985), identified transactional and transformational leadership styles.
● Transactional leadership – characteristic of leaders who focus on supervision and organizational goals
achieved through a system of rewards and punishments; maintenance of the organizational status quo.
● Transformational leadership – characteristic of leaders who are 1) charismatic role models, 2)
inspirational(optimistic about goal attainment), 3) intellectually stimulating (encourage critical thinking
and problem solving), and 4) individually considerate and who seek to change the organization.
Organizational culture is an important focus of organizational psychology. Organizational culture embodies the
social norms, values, visions, hierarchies, role expectations and interactions among its employees. It involves
how an organization is run, how it operates, and how it makes decisions.
Questions:
WORK-FAMILY BALANCE
12. Compare and contrast styles X and Y derived from McGregor’s scientific management theory:
13. What was another management style described by Donald Clifton?
14. Compare and contrast the different theories of leadership styles:
ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
This branch of I-0 psychology studies how workers interact with the tools of work (e.g., machines, work stations,
information displays, and the local environment) and how to design those tools to optimize workers’
productivity, safety, and health.
Human factors psychologists specifically seek to design machines to better support the workers using them.
They may be involved in design of work tools such as software, displays, or machines from the beginning of the
design process or during the testing of an already developed product. Human-software interactions are a large
sector of this research.
Attention – includes vigilance and monitoring, recognizing signals in noise, mental resources, and divided
attention.
Cognitive engineering – includes human software interactions in complex automated systems, especially
decision-making processes of workers as they are supported by the software system.
Workplace Safety
Checklists:
• Used to reduce accidents in the workplace.
• E.g. Pilots are required to go through a detailed checklist of the different parts of the aircraft before
takeoff to ensure that all essential equipment is working correctly.
Time limits on operating equipment:
• Limits how long an operator, such as a pilot or truck driver, is allowed to operate the equipment.
Questions:
1. What are some important roles that human factor professionals are involved in?
2. Think of things you used at your job. How do you think human factors psychologists have influenced the
making of such things?
3. What is one method used in the workplace to reduce accidents?
4. What are some areas of study done in human factors psychology? (Hint: look at Table 13.4)