Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/4844
Title: Identifying decision‑making style: Do REI‑20 and GDMS measure the same?
Authors: Wachowicz, Tomasz
Roszkowska, Ewa
Filipowicz‑Chomko, Marzena
Keywords: Decision-making style
Decision profile
Gender
Rational-experiential inventory
General decision-making style
Issue Date: Dec-2023
Publisher: Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, Kolkata
Series/Report no.: Vol. 50;No. 4
Abstract: The paper aims to study relationships between results obtained by two instruments, the rational-experiential inventory, in its modified version named REI-20, and the general decision-making style (GDMS). Although both instruments differ in concept and construction of decision styles, they refer to two very similar constructs—rationality and experientiality or intuition, resulting from the dual concept of cognitive-experiential self-theory. Using the same experimental sample, we examined the relationships between the REI-20 modes, i.e., rational and experiential, and GDMS modes, i.e., rational, intuitive, dependent, avoidant, and spontaneous. We checked how rational and experiential decision-making styles identified by REI-20 correspond to the rational and intuitive modes of GDMS. We also examined the relationships between clusters of decision-making profiles, defined as combinations of various levels of rational and intuitive/experiential modes determined from both instruments. Finally, we analyzed the gender differences between the styles identified by both inventories. The between-tool analysis showed that rationality determined from REI-20 and GDMS correlate only weakly; however, the correlation between experientiality and intuitiveness is strong. Both tools produced inconclusive results when comparing gender differences. REI-20 differentiated significantly between genders, indicating that women are less rational and more experimental than men, while GDMS considered these differences insignificant. It implies that using a particular decision-making style inventory in advanced analyses of the process and outcomes of the decision-making requires exceptional caution as various tools may produce a different classification of decision-makers and lead to different, if not contradictory, conclusions.
Description: T. Wachowicz, University of Economics in Katowice, 1Maja 50, 40‑287 Katowice, Poland | E. Roszkowska, Faculty of Computer Science, Bialystok University of Technology, Wiejska 45A, 15‑351 Bialystok, Poland | M. Filipowicz‑Chomko, Faculty of Computer Science, Bialystok University of Technology, Wiejska 45A, 15‑351 Bialystok, Poland
p. 415-437
URI: https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/4844
ISSN: 0304-0941(print version)
Appears in Collections:Issue 4, December 2023

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