Ever-present cognitive diversity: The mediating role of sentimentality and creative self-efficacy in achieving ambidextrous behavior
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/104160Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Arce López, Paola Steffany; Cabeza Pullés, Dainelis; Ruiz Moreno, Antonia; Ortega Egea, María TeresaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Perceived cognitive diversity Ambidexterity Sentimentality Creative self-efficacy Creative self-efficacy
Fecha
2025Resumen
Previous research has not determined whether perceived cognitive diversity translates into an
advantage. This study explores empirically the relationship of cognitive diversity to ambidexterity.
It analyzes not only the direct but also the indirect influence through employees’ behavior
and traits (creative self-efficacy and sentimentality) that improve the capability of being ambidextrous.
We ground this study in self-efficacy theory, and trait activation theory, which studies
personality traits (sentimentality) in context (cognitive diversity) and latent inclination to behave
in a specific manner (ambidextrous behavior). We used structural equations modeling (SEM) with
data from a sample of 211 public employees. The results show both a positive direct effect of
perceived cognitive diversity on ambidextrous behavior and a mediating effect of behavior and
traits on the relationship. Self-efficacy and sentimentality are attitudes that must be managed
jointly with diversity, so that they are not can make them a factor that threatens employees’
ambidexterity.