The Five-Factor Perceived Shared Mental Model Scale: A Consolidation of Items Across the Contemporary Literature

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Abstract

Literature on Shared Mental Models (SMMs) has been burgeoning in recent years and this has provided increasingly detailed insight and evidence into the importance of SMMs within specific contexts. However, because past research predominantly focused on SMM structure as measured by diverse, context-dependent measures, a consolidated multi-dimensional measure of perceived SMMs that can be used across diverse team contexts is currently lacking. Furthermore, different conceptualizations of the dimensionality of SMMs exist, which further impedes the comparison between studies. These key limitations might hinder future development in the SMM literature. We argue that the field of SMMs has now matured enough that it is possible to take a deductive approach and evaluate the prior studies in order to refine the key SMMs dimensions, operationalizations, and measurement. Hence, we take a three-stage approach to consolidate existing literature scale-based measures of SMMs, using four samples. Ultimately, this leads to a 20-item five-dimensional scale (i.e., equipment, execution, interaction, composition, and temporal SMMs) - the Five Factor Perceived Shared Mental Model Scale (5-PSMMS). Our scale provides scholars with a tool which enables the measurement, and comparison, of SMMs across diverse team contexts. It offers practitioners the option to more straightforwardly assess perceived SMMs in their teams, allowing the identification of challenges in their teams and facilitating the design of appropriate interventions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number784200
Number of pages18
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Jan 2022

Keywords

  • COGNITIVE UNDERPINNINGS
  • DIVERSITY
  • FIELD
  • INTRAGROUP CONFLICT
  • PSYCHOLOGICAL SAFETY
  • TASK INTERDEPENDENCE
  • TEAM PERFORMANCE
  • TIME
  • TRANSACTIVE MEMORY-SYSTEMS
  • VALIDATION
  • deductive scale development
  • perceived mental models
  • shared mental models
  • team cognition
  • teams

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