Measuring motivations: Integrating content and method |
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Authors: | Wolfgang Bilsky Shalom H. Schwartz |
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Affiliation: | aWestfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Fliednerstrasse 21, 48149 Münster, Germany;bDepartment of Psychology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91905, Israel |
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Abstract: | Measuring single motives with multiple methods often yields low intercorrelations. This raises questions about the meaningfulness of the motive constructs and the validity of the methods. Seeking to explain these findings, theorists distinguish implicit from explicit methods and suggest that they tap somewhat different constructs. We propose an approach that argues for the coherence of the motive constructs across methods, while offering a refined conception of the implicit–explicit methodological distinction. Employing facet theory, we treat motives and methods as two facets that are crossed. Implicit and explicit methods serve as poles of a continuum on the methods facet. Based on this approach, we generate and test hypotheses concerning the structure of relations among motive indicators in multidimensional space. We test these hypotheses with ordinal MDS, reanalyzing multitrait–multimethod matrixes from five studies that examined affiliation, achievement, and power motives. Analyses reveal a correspondence between different indicators of the same motive, independent of assessment method. They also show that the implicit–explicit distinction is best viewed as ordering methods along a definable continuum. |
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Keywords: | Motives Assessment methods Facet theory MDS MTMM |
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