Previous research validating the Vroom‐Yetton leadership model has provided support for all the prescriptions of the model except the Conflict Rule. This rule prescribes group decision‐making methods when conflict among subordinates is anticipated and acceptance of the decision is critical, on the grounds that a group process provides a more effective vehicle for conflict resolution than other less participative methods. the present experiment tests the Conflict Rule against an alternative hypothesis that predicts conflict intensification and polarization in group settings. Forty groups of five members each considered a decision task chosen for its likelihood of generating task‐based conflict. the 2x2 design (decision‐making process by leader reward structure) created conditions in which a particular decision‐making process either conformed to or violated the normative prescriptions of Vroom and Yetton's model. Both attitudinal and behavioural measures of decision acceptance revealed that the interactive group process was significantly more effective than one‐to‐one consultation in generating support for a leader's solution. A secondary analysis treating the quality of the leader's decision as a covariate revealed no significant variation in the pattern of subordinate acceptance explained by this factor. Overall, the results support Vroom and Yetton's Conflict Rule and suggest that subordinates are far more likely to accept a leader's decision following an interactive group process regardless of either the leader's desire to reach consensus or the technical quality of the decision.
[1]
Frederick C. Miner,et al.
Group versus individual decision making: An investigation of performance measures, decision strategies, and process losses/gains
,
1984
.
[2]
R. H. George Field,et al.
A Test of the Vroom-Yetton Normative Model of Leadership
,
1982
.
[3]
Dean Tjosvold,et al.
Effects of Social Context on Consensus and Majority Vote Decision Making
,
1982
.
[4]
D. Curry,et al.
When disagreement facilitates performance in judgment tasks: Effects of different forms of cognitive conflict, information environments, and human information processing characteristics
,
1982
.
[5]
Charles Margerison,et al.
LEADERSHIP DECISION‐MAKING: AN EMPIRICAL TEST OF THE VROOM AND YETTON MODEL
,
1979
.
[6]
Arthur G. Jago,et al.
Configural cue utilization in implicit models of leader behavior.
,
1978
.
[7]
Victor H. Vroom,et al.
On the validity of the Vroom-Yetton model.
,
1978
.
[8]
David L. Ford,et al.
THE EFFECTS OF TWO NORMATIVE STRUCTURAL INTERVENTIONS ON ESTABLISHED AND AD HOC GROUPS: IMPLICATIONS FOR IMPROVING DECISION MAKING EFFECTIVENESS
,
1976
.
[9]
A. V. D. Ven,et al.
The Effectiveness of Nominal, Delphi, and Interacting Group Decision Making Processes
,
1974
.