
Prompt-specificity in scenario-based assessments : associations with personality versus knowledge and effects on predictive validity
- Author
- Thomas Rockstuhl and Filip Lievens (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Many scenario-based assessments (e.g., interviews, assessment center exercises, work samples, simulations, and situational judgment tests) use prompts (i.e., cues provided to respondents to increase the likelihood that the information received from them is clear, sufficient, and job-related). However, a dilemma for practitioners and researchers is how general or specific one should prompt people's answers. We posit that such differences in prompt-specificity (i.e., extent to which prompts cue performance criteria) have important implications for the predictive validity of scenario-based assessment scores. Drawing on the interplay of situation construal and situational strength theory, we propose that prompt-specificity leads to differential relationships between scenario-based scores and external constructs (personality traits vs. knowledge), which in turn affects the predictive validity of scenario-based assessments. We tested this general hypothesis using intercultural scenarios for predicting effectiveness in multicultural teams. Using a randomized predictive validation design, we contrast scores on these scenarios with general (N = 157) versus specific (N = 158) prompts. As a general conclusion, prompt-specificity mattered: Lesser prompt-specificity augmented the role of perspective taking and openness-to-experience in the intercultural scenario scores and their validity for predicting intercultural performance, whereas greater prompt-specificity increased the role of knowledge in these scores and their validity for predicting in-role performance. This study's theoretical and practical implications go beyond a specific assessment procedure and apply to a broad array of assessment and training approaches that rely on scenarios.
- Keywords
- SITUATIONAL JUDGMENT TESTS, CRITERION-RELATED VALIDITY, GENERAL MENTAL-ABILITY, INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES, CULTURAL INTELLIGENCE, PERSPECTIVE-TAKING, ORGANIZATIONAL CITIZENSHIP, PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS, BEHAVIORAL CONSISTENCY, COGNITIVE-ABILITY, simulations, situational judgment tests, prompts, scenarios, intercultural performance
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8702849
- MLA
- Rockstuhl, Thomas, and Filip Lievens. “Prompt-Specificity in Scenario-Based Assessments : Associations with Personality versus Knowledge and Effects on Predictive Validity.” JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, vol. 106, no. 1, 2021, pp. 122–39, doi:10.1037/apl0000498.
- APA
- Rockstuhl, T., & Lievens, F. (2021). Prompt-specificity in scenario-based assessments : associations with personality versus knowledge and effects on predictive validity. JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, 106(1), 122–139. https://doi.org/10.1037/apl0000498
- Chicago author-date
- Rockstuhl, Thomas, and Filip Lievens. 2021. “Prompt-Specificity in Scenario-Based Assessments : Associations with Personality versus Knowledge and Effects on Predictive Validity.” JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY 106 (1): 122–39. https://doi.org/10.1037/apl0000498.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Rockstuhl, Thomas, and Filip Lievens. 2021. “Prompt-Specificity in Scenario-Based Assessments : Associations with Personality versus Knowledge and Effects on Predictive Validity.” JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY 106 (1): 122–139. doi:10.1037/apl0000498.
- Vancouver
- 1.Rockstuhl T, Lievens F. Prompt-specificity in scenario-based assessments : associations with personality versus knowledge and effects on predictive validity. JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY. 2021;106(1):122–39.
- IEEE
- [1]T. Rockstuhl and F. Lievens, “Prompt-specificity in scenario-based assessments : associations with personality versus knowledge and effects on predictive validity,” JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, vol. 106, no. 1, pp. 122–139, 2021.
@article{8702849, abstract = {{Many scenario-based assessments (e.g., interviews, assessment center exercises, work samples, simulations, and situational judgment tests) use prompts (i.e., cues provided to respondents to increase the likelihood that the information received from them is clear, sufficient, and job-related). However, a dilemma for practitioners and researchers is how general or specific one should prompt people's answers. We posit that such differences in prompt-specificity (i.e., extent to which prompts cue performance criteria) have important implications for the predictive validity of scenario-based assessment scores. Drawing on the interplay of situation construal and situational strength theory, we propose that prompt-specificity leads to differential relationships between scenario-based scores and external constructs (personality traits vs. knowledge), which in turn affects the predictive validity of scenario-based assessments. We tested this general hypothesis using intercultural scenarios for predicting effectiveness in multicultural teams. Using a randomized predictive validation design, we contrast scores on these scenarios with general (N = 157) versus specific (N = 158) prompts. As a general conclusion, prompt-specificity mattered: Lesser prompt-specificity augmented the role of perspective taking and openness-to-experience in the intercultural scenario scores and their validity for predicting intercultural performance, whereas greater prompt-specificity increased the role of knowledge in these scores and their validity for predicting in-role performance. This study's theoretical and practical implications go beyond a specific assessment procedure and apply to a broad array of assessment and training approaches that rely on scenarios.}}, author = {{Rockstuhl, Thomas and Lievens, Filip}}, issn = {{0021-9010}}, journal = {{JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY}}, keywords = {{SITUATIONAL JUDGMENT TESTS,CRITERION-RELATED VALIDITY,GENERAL MENTAL-ABILITY,INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES,CULTURAL INTELLIGENCE,PERSPECTIVE-TAKING,ORGANIZATIONAL CITIZENSHIP,PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS,BEHAVIORAL CONSISTENCY,COGNITIVE-ABILITY,simulations,situational judgment tests,prompts,scenarios,intercultural performance}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{122--139}}, title = {{Prompt-specificity in scenario-based assessments : associations with personality versus knowledge and effects on predictive validity}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1037/apl0000498}}, volume = {{106}}, year = {{2021}}, }
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