Logo image
The Psychological and Neurological Bases of Leader Self-Complexity and Effects on Adaptive Decision-Making
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The Psychological and Neurological Bases of Leader Self-Complexity and Effects on Adaptive Decision-Making

Sean T Hannah, Pierre A Balthazard, David A Waldman, Peter L Jennings and Robert W Thatcher
Journal of applied psychology, Vol.98(3), pp.393-411
01/05/2013
PMID: 23544481

Abstract

Business & Economics Management Psychology Psychology, Applied Social Sciences
Complex contexts and environments require leaders to be highly adaptive and to adjust their behavioral responses to meet diverse role demands. Such adaptability may be contingent upon leaders having requisite complexity to facilitate effectiveness across a range of roles. However, there exists little empirical understanding of the etiology or basis of leader complexity. To this end, we conceptualized a model of leader self-complexity that is inclusive of both the mind (the complexity of leaders' self-concepts) and the brain (the neuroscientific basis for complex leadership). We derived psychometric and neurologically based measures, the latter based on quantitative electroencephalogram (qEEG) profiles of leader self-complexity, and tested their separate effects on the adaptive decision-making of 103 military leaders. Results demonstrated that both measures accounted for unique variance in external ratings of adaptive decision-making. We discuss how these findings provide a deeper understanding of the latent and dynamic mechanisms that underpin leaders' self-complexity and their adaptability.

Metrics

Details

Logo image