All Stories

  1. An ambulatory diary study of mobile device use, sleep, and positive mood.
  2. Is It Possible to Improve Test Takers’ Perceptions of Ability Tests by Providing an Explanation?
  3. Do Attractiveness and Competition Influence Faking Intentions in Selection Interviews?
  4. Tell Me Sweet Little Lies: How Does Faking in Interviews Affect Interview Scores and Interview Validity?
  5. The relevance of sleep and circadian misalignment for procrastination among shift workers
  6. Selling and Smooth-Talking: Effects of Interviewer Impression Management from a Signaling Perspective
  7. Individual Difference Variables and the Occurrence and Effectiveness of Faking Behavior in Interviews
  8. A test of the generalizability of a recently suggested conceptual model for assessment center ratings
  9. Situational judgment is needed in SJTs
  10. How and why do interviewers try to make impressions on applicants? A qualitative study.
  11. Transparency of Assessment Centers: Lower Criterion-related Validity but Greater Opportunity to Perform?
  12. Why Do Situational Interviews Predict Performance? Is it Saying How You Would Behave or Knowing How You Should Behave?
  13. Guidelines and Ethical Considerations for Assessment Center Operations
  14. Arbeitsproben
  15. Faking Good and Faking Bad Among Military Conscripts
  16. Effects of Individual Differences on Applicant Perceptions of an Operational Assessment Center
  17. Why do Situational Interviews Predict Job Performance? The Role of Interviewees’ Ability to Identify Criteria
  18. Shall we continue or stop disapproving of self-presentation? Evidence on impression management and faking in a selection context and their relation to job performance
  19. Are Improvements in Assessment Center Construct-Related Validity Paralleled by Improvements in Criterion-Related Validity?
  20. Establishing the Cross-Situational Convergence of the Ability to Identify Criteria: Consistency and Prediction Across Similar and Dissimilar Assessment Center Exercises
  21. Situation assessment as an ignored factor in the behavioral consistency paradigm underlying the validity of personnel selection procedures.
  22. Assessment of Situational Demands in a Selection Interview: Reflective style or sensitivity?
  23. Responding to Personality Tests in a Selection Context: The Role of the Ability to Identify Criteria and the Ideal-Employee Factor
  24. The Interactive Effect of Impression Motivation and Cognitive Schema on Self-Presentation in a Personality Inventory1
  25. Der Beitrag sozialer Kompetenz zur Vorhersage beruflicher Leistung
  26. EXERCISES AND DIMENSIONS ARE THE CURRENCY OF ASSESSMENT CENTERS
  27. A different look at why selection procedures work
  28. Job requirements for control room jobs in nuclear power plants
  29. IS MORE STRUCTURE REALLY BETTER? A COMPARISON OF FRAME-OF-REFERENCE TRAINING AND DESCRIPTIVELY ANCHORED RATING SCALES TO IMPROVE INTERVIEWERS’ RATING QUALITY
  30. More than 2%! Incremental validity of an AC beyond GMA
  31. Officer Selection for the Swiss Armed Forces
  32. “I Know What You Want to Know”: The Impact of Interviewees' Ability to Identify Criteria on Interview Performance and Construct-Related Validity
  33. Transparency in Structured Interviews: Consequences for Construct and Criterion-Related Validity
  34. It Is Not Yet Time to Dismiss Dimensions in Assessment Centers
  35. Representational flexibility and the challenge to elemental theories of learning: Response to commentaries
  36. Stimulus coding in human associative learning: Flexible representations of parts and wholes
  37. Comparing elemental and configural associative theories in human causal learning: A case for attention.
  38. Do within-dimension ratings in assessment centers really lead to improved construct validity?
  39. Candidates' Ability to Identify Criteria in Nontransparent Selection Procedures: Evidence from an assessment center and a structured interview
  40. Extinction of conditioned inhibition through nonreinforced presentation of the inhibitor
  41. The Comparator Theory Fails to Account for the Selective Role of Within-Compound Associations in Cue-Selection Effects
  42. Vom Ansehen der Arbeits- und Organisationspsychologie
  43. Prior experience can influence whether the whole is different from the sum of its parts
  44. The experimental task influences cue competition in human causal learning.
  45. Past experience influences the processing of stimulus compounds in human Pavlovian conditioning
  46. Within-compound associations in retrospective revaluation and in direct learning: A challenge for comparator theory
  47. A Modified Version of the Unique Cue Theory Accounts for Olfactory Compound Processing in Honeybees
  48. The impact of reinforcement density on response differentiation in configural discrimination problems
  49. Configural learning in human Pavlovian conditioning: acquisition of a biconditional discrimination
  50. Evidence for the application of rules in Pavlovian electrodermal conditioning with humans
  51. What is learned in patterning discriminations? Further tests of configural accounts of associative learning in human electrodermal conditioning
  52. Evidence for stereotype threat in a simulated selection setting
  53. Assessors' cognitive load impairs rating quality in AC group discussions
  54. Do cognitive demands and assessors' expertise affect AC construct-related validity?
  55. Stereotype threat in the real world: Evidence from employment testing
  56. When and How Much Does Rater Training Improve Rating Accuracy?
  57. A Similarity-Based Map of Assessment Center Dimensions
  58. A Social Interaction at Their Core: Relevant Issues for Interviews
  59. Faking Good and Faking Bad Among Army Conscripts