Etermined valid at a 0.4 or higher level. Taking this into consideration, I performed ran a second EFA leaving in the lower factor-loading as acceptable, I found that fewer questions were eliminated from the constructs, but my findings did not significantly change.DemographicsTable 2 informs us of demographics of the study’s respondents. The age of respondents ranged from under 30 to over 60 years of age. Specifically, 13.5 were under 30, 24 are ages 31?0, 29.4 are ages 41?0, 25.7 are ages 51?0, and 6.6 are over the age of 60. In our sample, female participants (29.4 ), paled in comparison to males (69.5 ). Further, individual contributors represented a little over half (54.2 ) and managers (45.3 ) of the sample. With respect to experience, 42 had over 20 years of experience and fewer than 2 of IT Food green 3 web professionals have less than 1 year. IT professionals with 1? years experience represented 10.8 , 12.5 of respondents had 5?0 years, 18.6 had 11?5 years, and 16?0 years of experience AZD3839 (free base) custom synthesis consisted of 13.9 .TABLE 2 | Characteristics of respondents (n = 795). N Age <30 years 31?0 years 41?0 years 51?0 years Over 60 years No response Gender Female Male No response Job role Individual contributor Manager No response Experience Less than 1 year 1? years 5?0 years 11?5 years 16?0 years Over 20 years 15 86 99 148 11 436 1.88 10.81 12.45 18.60 13.88 42.38 431 360 4 54.21 45.28 <1.0 235 555 5 29.40 69.50 <1.0 107 191 234 204 52 7 13.46 24.02 29.44 25.66 6.60 <1.0Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.orgJune 2015 | Volume 6 | ArticlePittengerEngagement and IT professionalsand Lind's (1980) root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) with a 90 confidence interval was used to reflect both the fit and parsimony of the model at hand. The RMSEA was 0.035 and had a PCLOSE of 1.000. The non-normed fit index (NNFI; Tucker and Lewis, 1973), the comparative fit index (CFI; Bentler, 1990), and incremental fit index (IFI) as other goodness-of-fit measures that reflect the proportionate improvement in fit of the measurement model over a more restricted baseline model were used. The NNFI, CFI, and IFI all were "close to 0.96" indicating satisfactory fit (Hu and Bentler, 1998).and composite reliability, for each construct. Only minor issues are apparent in a few of the variables: adaptability, conflict management, empathy, and organization awareness are just below the 0.7 threshold for reliability, but this is justifiable as there are only two items for each of these factors. Tables 3 and 4 indicate the validity and reliability and correlation results.Common Method Bias (CMB)/VarianceSeveral steps were taken to mitigate, detect, and control for a common method bias (CMB). All survey items were carefully constructed and pre-tested, valid, multidimensional constructs were used (Huber, 1985). The scale anchors and format in the questionnaire were varied and a series of scale-validation processes were performed before distributions. The Harmon's test results indicated that 28 of the variance is explained by a single factor. The correlations with the common variable, when including a marker variable, were 0.34, indicating a common method variance (CMV) of 11.6 , indicating that the study does not suffer from a CMB. Multicollinearity was examined through linear regression analysis on the study constructs and low variance inflation factors (VIFs) were found; nearly all VIFs were below three and only one construct; absorption (ABS) had indicators with VIFs above.Etermined valid at a 0.4 or higher level. Taking this into consideration, I performed ran a second EFA leaving in the lower factor-loading as acceptable, I found that fewer questions were eliminated from the constructs, but my findings did not significantly change.DemographicsTable 2 informs us of demographics of the study's respondents. The age of respondents ranged from under 30 to over 60 years of age. Specifically, 13.5 were under 30, 24 are ages 31?0, 29.4 are ages 41?0, 25.7 are ages 51?0, and 6.6 are over the age of 60. In our sample, female participants (29.4 ), paled in comparison to males (69.5 ). Further, individual contributors represented a little over half (54.2 ) and managers (45.3 ) of the sample. With respect to experience, 42 had over 20 years of experience and fewer than 2 of IT professionals have less than 1 year. IT professionals with 1? years experience represented 10.8 , 12.5 of respondents had 5?0 years, 18.6 had 11?5 years, and 16?0 years of experience consisted of 13.9 .TABLE 2 | Characteristics of respondents (n = 795). N Age <30 years 31?0 years 41?0 years 51?0 years Over 60 years No response Gender Female Male No response Job role Individual contributor Manager No response Experience Less than 1 year 1? years 5?0 years 11?5 years 16?0 years Over 20 years 15 86 99 148 11 436 1.88 10.81 12.45 18.60 13.88 42.38 431 360 4 54.21 45.28 <1.0 235 555 5 29.40 69.50 <1.0 107 191 234 204 52 7 13.46 24.02 29.44 25.66 6.60 <1.0Frontiers in Psychology | www.frontiersin.orgJune 2015 | Volume 6 | ArticlePittengerEngagement and IT professionalsand Lind's (1980) root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) with a 90 confidence interval was used to reflect both the fit and parsimony of the model at hand. The RMSEA was 0.035 and had a PCLOSE of 1.000. The non-normed fit index (NNFI; Tucker and Lewis, 1973), the comparative fit index (CFI; Bentler, 1990), and incremental fit index (IFI) as other goodness-of-fit measures that reflect the proportionate improvement in fit of the measurement model over a more restricted baseline model were used. The NNFI, CFI, and IFI all were "close to 0.96" indicating satisfactory fit (Hu and Bentler, 1998).and composite reliability, for each construct. Only minor issues are apparent in a few of the variables: adaptability, conflict management, empathy, and organization awareness are just below the 0.7 threshold for reliability, but this is justifiable as there are only two items for each of these factors. Tables 3 and 4 indicate the validity and reliability and correlation results.Common Method Bias (CMB)/VarianceSeveral steps were taken to mitigate, detect, and control for a common method bias (CMB). All survey items were carefully constructed and pre-tested, valid, multidimensional constructs were used (Huber, 1985). The scale anchors and format in the questionnaire were varied and a series of scale-validation processes were performed before distributions. The Harmon's test results indicated that 28 of the variance is explained by a single factor. The correlations with the common variable, when including a marker variable, were 0.34, indicating a common method variance (CMV) of 11.6 , indicating that the study does not suffer from a CMB. Multicollinearity was examined through linear regression analysis on the study constructs and low variance inflation factors (VIFs) were found; nearly all VIFs were below three and only one construct; absorption (ABS) had indicators with VIFs above.

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