Implicit Personality and Leadership in Stressful and Dangerous Situations: A First Step

Abstract

Leadership in stressful and dangerous situations is vitally important in terms of lives, property, and national strategic objectives. But our understanding of effective leadership in these and other contexts is limited. Part of the problem is that interactionist theoretical perspectives are not reflected in contemporary leadership thinking. In addition, the impact of individual differences on leadership is often misrepresented or hidden by linear correlations and regressions conducted on continuous scores. This study employed new, innovative, indirect conditional reasoning measures to assess the personalities of 627 leaders entering the military s most challenging and stressful combat leader development course (the US Army Ranger School). These innovative measures predicted compelling differences in leadership, attrition, and in the peer evaluations made during the training. Analyses conducted on the continuous personality scores demonstrate that these findings are misrepresented or hidden by linear correlations and regressions. As an alternative, I present a configural scoring scheme, couched in a poker analogy, to explain how these individual differences combine to predict the odds of success for each of the 18 personality types studied.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 2012
Accession Number
ADA563396

Entities

People

  • Daniel R. Smith

Organizations

  • Georgia Tech

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Applied Psychology
  • Attrition
  • Behavioral Sciences
  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Science
  • Human Behavior
  • Information Processing
  • Instructors
  • Mental Processes
  • Organizational Structure
  • Personality
  • Psychological Tests
  • Psychology
  • Reasoning
  • Social Psychology
  • Students
  • Thinking

Fields of Study

  • Psychology

Readers

  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.
  • Organizational Psychology.
  • Systems Analysis and Design