F. David Schoorman’s research while affiliated with Purdue University West Lafayette and other places

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Publications (41)


The big circle (conceptual space) of vulnerability
  • Article

April 2025

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3 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Trust Research

F. David Schoorman

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Kinshuk Sharma

Towards a Psychometrically Sound and Culturally Invariant Measure of Propensity to Trust
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

February 2025

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22 Reads

The current measures of Propensity to Trust in the literature have suffered from reliability and validity issues as well as a lack of evidence of invariance across cultures. To address these concerns, we conducted three studies to develop a propensity to trust measure that possesses strong psychometric qualities and cross-cultural invariance. In study 1, we created potential new items and estimated content validity of each item in a sample of students. In study 2, we collected data from 2786 working adults in 30 countries and used these data to test the factor loadings, reliability, and invariance of the new scale across 6 GLOBE clusters. This process created a 5-item propensity to trust measure that has a Cronbach alpha greater than 0.70 for each GLOBE cluster. Tests of invariance indicate configural invariance and strong support for metric invariance. We reclassified the data by the cultural variable of “tightness” or “looseness” as defined by Gelfand et al. (2011) for 9 of the countries in this study and found our scale had configural invariance as well as metric and scalar invariance. In study 3, we examined the convergent and discriminant validity and found evidence supporting the construct validity of the new scale. This is the first measure of propensity to trust that has been demonstrated to be culturally invariant. With a rapidly growing body of research being conducted across international cultures, this would be an important development for the field.

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How Can It Be Made Right Again? A Review of Trust Repair Research

April 2022

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193 Reads

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45 Citations

Journal of Management

We review research on the topic of trust repair, which has proceeded over the past four decades using three different philosophical mechanisms that provide the bases through which trust is restored by multiple repair tactics. We base our definition of trust repair on the view that trust is “a psychological state comprising the intention to accept vulnerability based on the positive expectations of the intentions or behaviors of another.” We define trust repair as any increase in trust above the post-transgression level and complete repair as an increase in trust to the pre-transgression level. We provide an overview of the research designs incorporated in the trust-repair literature and make recommendations and cautions in measuring trust repair. We then summarize the emergence of the different mechanisms behind trust repair, namely, attributional, social equilibrium, and structural mechanisms, and review literature on the related verbal and behavioral repair tactics that can be employed after a transgression. We also provide a review on the process of trust repair, that is, the different stages that unfold to repair trust. We conclude by suggesting that future research should explore trust repair not only from an isolated tactics perspective but also from a broader pathway perspective. Finally, as trust repair occurs over time, future research should also explore the role of differing perceptions of time in the trust-repair process.


Figure 1. Correlation between coaches feeling that their client's need for autonomy was important and the coaches' writing about benevolence.
Figure 2. The relation between the client-perceived coach's benevolence and the clients' autonomyneed fulfilment.
Continued.
Trust me, I am a caring coach: The benefits of establishing trustworthiness during coaching by communicating benevolence

August 2019

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838 Reads

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25 Citations

Journal of Trust Research

A client's trust in the coach is essential for a well-functioning coaching interaction. This trust depends on the coach's trustworthiness in terms of ability, integrity, and benevolence. In three mixed-method studies, we investigated how these components of trustworthiness were established by the coach asking inexperienced (N1 = 42) and experienced (N2 = 29) coaches as well as clients (N3 = 24). An inductive qualitative content analysis revealed a range of approaches to establish trustworthiness that varied depending on the coach's experience: Inexperienced coaches (Study 1) and clients of inexperienced coaches (Study 3) focused most on the coach's ability, whereas experienced coaches (Study 2) focused most on the coach's benevolence. As the client's autonomy need is important in coaching, questions about the need (Study 2) and its fulfilment (Study 3) were added and it was hypothesised that communicating benevolence is autonomy need supportive. The results revealed that when a coach perceived a higher client autonomy need they focused more on communicating benevolence (Study 2). In accordance, when the client reported that the coach communicated more benevolence they felt more autonomy need fulfilment (Study 3). Thus, communicating benevolence can support the client's autonomy need.




Empowerment in veterinary clinics: The role of trust in delegation

January 2016

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811 Reads

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65 Citations

Journal of Trust Research

Several authors have suggested that trust is important to empowerment. This research develops the theoretical relationship between empowerment and trust. Trust, defined as a willingness to be vulnerable, was found to contribute to managers’ taking greater risks in their relationships with their employees through increased delegation of authority. Results show strong support that trust for an employee is a function of the employee’s perceived ability, benevolence, and integrity, as well as the manager’s propensity to trust.


Would Trust by Any Other Name Smell as Sweet? Reflections on the Meanings and Uses of Trust Across Disciplines and Context

September 2015

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155 Reads

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37 Citations

Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation

The theoretical foundations of this chapter are based on the work of Mayer, Davis, and Schoorman (1995) and Schoorman, Mayer, and Davis (2007) (see Fig. 2.1). First, we briefl y review the competing defi nitions of trust that have been widely adopted in the past 20 years. Next, we examine the implications of the choice of defi nition, and fi nally we will review some of the constructs used to represent trust across a number of disciplines. In doing so we view these constructs from the lens of the Mayer et al. (1995) defi nition.


Trust as a Moderator of the Relationship Between Mentoring and Knowledge Transfer

July 2011

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223 Reads

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62 Citations

Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies

To be effective, organizations must facilitate knowledge transfer between employees. Mentoring has long been viewed as a vehicle for effective knowledge transfer. The authors break new ground in examining the role of trust as a moderator of the relationship between mentoring and knowledge transfer. Results of a study conducted among employees of a hospital who indicated they had mentors show main effects for both mentoring and trust as well as a significant interaction effect. Implications of these findings for knowledge transfer are discussed.


Citations (36)


... With the increasing use of AI and GenAI in mental health support (e.g., screening for mental health issues [88,89], LLM-powered psychotherapy [47,67], mental education [89]), several ethical challenges emerge [18,68,84]. These ethical considerations have centered around (1) accountability that encompasses governance, legal responsibilities, and liability, ensuring that actions and decisions by AI are traceable and justifiable [13,100]; (2) autonomy that demands respect for human decision-making, emphasizing informed consent and human oversight so that individuals retain control over their mental health treatment [31,53,83]; (3) equity that seeks to eliminate biases and ensure fairness and justice in AI interactions [56,83,102,103,112]; (4) integrity that relates to the honesty and ethical conduct in mental health research and psychotherapy delivery [94,103]; (5) non-maleficence focusing on preventing harm, avoiding misleading information, and ensuring the safety and mental well-being of users [28,86]; (6) privacy that focuses on handling mental health data and protection of client confidentiality [56,83,102]; (7) security that aims to protect sensitive data from unauthorized access and breaches, emphasizing confidentiality and safety [16,48]; (8) transparency that involves reasoning behind AI-driven mental health recommendations be explainable and accessible to clients and practitioners [16,56]; and (9) trust, cultivated through consistent reliability and therapeutic value of AI tools within mental health care [94]. ...

Reference:

Understanding Attitudes and Trust of Generative AI Chatbots for Social Anxiety Support
What We Do While Waiting: The Experience of Vulnerability in Trusting Relationships
  • Citing Article
  • August 2024

Academy of Management Review

... These interactions present challenges to existing methods of measuring and modeling trust. The inherent anthropomorphic characteristics of AI chatbots create ambiguity regarding whether students form trust in these systems based on interpersonal trust frameworks typically applied to human relationships (Mayer et al., 1995) or technology trust frameworks designed for human-technology interactions (McKnight et al., 2011). ...

An Integrative Model of Organizational Trust
  • Citing Chapter
  • November 2006

... Trust is defined as "a psychological state comprising of the intention to accept vulnerability based upon positive expectations" (Sharma et al., 2023). It plays a pivotal role in adoption of automation, especially under uncertainty (Yerdon et al., 2017). ...

How Can It Be Made Right Again? A Review of Trust Repair Research
  • Citing Article
  • April 2022

Journal of Management

... These technologies offer the potential for real-time, scalable, and highly personalized coaching interactions, mimicking human conversational capabilities and adapting responses to individual user needs. [6,8] Preliminary applications of LLMs in fields like nutrition and physical activity coaching have demonstrated promising outcomes by providing dynamic, customized advice [9][10][11][12]. ...

Trust me, I am a caring coach: The benefits of establishing trustworthiness during coaching by communicating benevolence

Journal of Trust Research

... Affective commitment describes the degree to which an employee emotionally identifies, attaches, and involves themself with their organisation (Allen & Meyer, 1996). When employees feel highly invested in the organisation, they are more likely to identify with the goals and values of the organisation (Mayer & Schoorman, 1992). ...

Predicting Participation and Production Outcomes Through a Two-Dimensional Model of Organizational Commitment
  • Citing Article
  • August 1992

Academy of Management Journal

... On the other hand, a benevolence-based breach will not be a critical issue in CBT relations as that kind of expectations is not germane to such relations. However, we put forth that benevolence and integrity perceptions have some sort of moral communality, which might make it hard to separate these two (Tinsley, 1996). Especially after a benevolence-based breach, this can easily contaminate integrity-based perceptions, which makes it hard to examine this type of breach exclusively. ...

DIALOGUE.

Academy of Management Review

Janina C. Latack

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Robert J. House

... In this relationship, when an individual trusts, weakness is accepted because of the risk of betrayal and failure. A commonly cited definition of trust is by Schoorman et al. (1996), who define trust as "the willingness of a party to be vulnerable to the actions of another party based on the expectation that the other will perform a particular action important to the trustor, irrespective of the ability to monitor or control that other party" (p. 712). ...

Organizational trust: philosophical perspectives and conceptual definitions
  • Citing Article
  • January 2007

Academy of Management Review

... Another plausible theory lens is stewardship theory, which also minimizes the problem of opportunism. However, stewardship theory has been criticized for envisioning an almost mythological creature of pure virtue(Albanese et al., 1997;Arthurs and Busenitz, 2003) and, in our opinion, is too extreme. ...

Dialogue
  • Citing Article
  • January 1997

Academy of Management Review

... Our primary interest in this study was in how presentation flaws and delay would affect perceptions of trust. Following Robert et al. (2009), we used the same trust belief and trust intention measures that they adapted from Jarvenpaa et al. (1998), Mayer and Davis (1999), and Schoorman et al. (2016). We examined the difference scores between evaluations of trusting belief and trusting intention before and after the vignette was read. ...

Empowerment in veterinary clinics: The role of trust in delegation
  • Citing Article
  • January 2016

Journal of Trust Research

... Empirical evidence is supportive of this motivational view of trust, showing that trust in one's own child or in one's subordinates influences relinquishment of control, delegation, and involvement in decision making (Landry et al., 2008;Schoorman, Mayer, & Davis, 2016;Spreitzer & Mishra, 1999). One experimental study has also demonstrated that managers who were told that they could trust their team members disclosed more information to team members and considered their suggestions more than managers who were told that they could not trust their team members (Zand, 1972). ...

Preface: Empowerment in veterinary clinics: the role of trust in delegation
  • Citing Article
  • January 2016

Journal of Trust Research