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Dive into the research topics where Marylène Gagné is active.

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Featured researches published by Marylène Gagné.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2001

Need Satisfaction, Motivation, and Well-Being in the Work Organizations of a Former Eastern Bloc Country: A Cross-Cultural Study of Self-Determination:

Richard M. Ryan; Marylène Gagné; Dean R. Leone; Julian Usunov; Boyanka P. Kornazheva

Past studies in U.S. work organizations have supported a model derived from self-determination theory in which autonomy-supportive work climates predict satisfaction of the intrinsic needs for competence, autonomy, and relatedness, which in turn predict task motivation and psychological adjustment on the job. To test this model cross-culturally, the authors studied employees of state-owned companies in Bulgaria, a country that has traditionally had a central-planning economy, a totalitarian political system, and collectivist values. A sample from a privately owned American corporation was used for comparison purposes. Results using structural equation modeling suggested that the model fit the data from each country, that the constructs were equivalent across countries, and that some paths of the structural model fit equivalently for the two countries but that county moderated the other paths.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2003

Les passions de l'ame: on obsessive and harmonious passion.

Robert J. Vallerand; Céline M. Blanchard; Geneviève A. Mageau; Richard Koestner; Catherine F. Ratelle; Maude Leonard; Marylène Gagné; Josée Marsolais

Passion is defined as a strong inclination toward an activity that people like, that they find important, and in which they invest time and energy. Two types of passion are proposed: obsessive and harmonious. Obsessive passion (OP) refers to a controlled internalization of an activity in ones identity that creates an internal pressure to engage in the activity that the person likes. Harmonious passion (HP) refers to an autonomous internalization that leads individuals to choose to engage in the activity that they like. HP promotes healthy adaptation whereas OP thwarts it by causing negative affect and rigid persistence. Results from four studies involving more than 900 participants from different populations supported the proposed conceptualization.


Motivation and Emotion | 2003

The role of autonomy support and autonomy orientation in prosocial behavior engagement

Marylène Gagné

Two studies examined individual and environmental forces that affect engagement in prosocial behavior. Self-determination theory was used to derive a model in which autonomy orientation and autonomy support predicted satisfaction of three core psychological needs, which in turn led to engagement in prosocial activities. In Study 1, college students reported their engagement in various prosocial activities, and completed measures of autonomy orientation, parental autonomy support, and general need satisfaction. In Study 2, volunteer workers completed measures of autonomy orientation, work autonomy support and need satisfaction at work. The number of volunteered hours indicated the amount of prosocial engagement. Results across the studies showed that autonomy orientation was strongly related to engagement in prosocial behavior, while autonomy support was modestly related. Need satisfaction partially mediated the effect of autonomy orientation, and fully mediated the effect of autonomy support. Interestingly, autonomy support predicted lower volunteer turnover. Implications for how prosocial behavior can be motivated are discussed.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2008

Understanding e-learning continuance intention in the workplace: A self-determination theory perspective

Juan Carlos Roca; Marylène Gagné

Based on self-determination theory (SDT), this study proposed an extended Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) in the context of e-learning service. In the proposed model perceived usefulness, perceived playfulness and perceived ease of use are predicted to be influenced by perceived autonomy support, perceived competence and perceived relatedness. Although TAM has received fairly extensive attention in prior research, this study is one of the first to examine the effects of motivational factors affecting TAM constructs. The results show that applying SDT to e-learning in a work setting can be useful for predicting continuance intention.


Educational and Psychological Measurement | 2010

The Motivation at Work Scale: Validation Evidence in Two Languages:

Marylène Gagné; Jacques Forest; Marie-Hélène Gilbert; Caroline Aubé; Estelle M. Morin; Angela Malorni

The Motivation at Work Scale (MAWS) was developed in accordance with the multidimensional conceptualization of motivation postulated in self-determination theory. The authors examined the structure of the MAWS in a group of 1,644 workers in two different languages, English and French. Results obtained from these samples suggested that the structure of motivation at work across languages is consistently organized into four different types: intrinsic motivation, identified regulation, introjected regulation, and external regulation. The MAWS subscales were predictably associated with organizational behavior constructs. The importance of this new multidimensional scale to the development of new work motivation research is discussed.


European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology | 2015

The Multidimensional Work Motivation Scale: Validation evidence in seven languages and nine countries

Marylène Gagné; Jacques Forest; Maarten Vansteenkiste; Laurence Crevier-Braud; Anja Van den Broeck; Ann Kristin G. Aspeli; Jenny Bellerose; Charles Benabou; Emanuela Chemolli; Stefan T. Güntert; Hallgeir Halvari; Devani Laksmi Indiyastuti; Peter A. Johnson; Marianne Hauan Molstad; Mathias Naudin; Assane Ndao; Anja H. Olafsen; Patrice Roussel; Zheni Wang; Cathrine Westbye

Self-determination theory proposes a multidimensional conceptualization of motivation comprising autonomous and controlled forms. Whereas autonomous motivation relates positively to individuals’ optimal functioning (e.g., well-being, performance), controlled motivation is less beneficial. To be able to use self-determination theory in the field of organizational behaviour, the Multidimensional Work Motivation Scale was developed and tested using data from 3435 workers in seven languages and nine countries. Factorial analyses indicated that the 19-item scale has the same factor structure across the seven languages. Convergent and discriminant validity tests across the countries also indicate that the psychological needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness as well as the theoretically derived antecedents to work motivation (e.g., leadership and job design) are predictably related to the different forms of motivation, which in turn are predictably related to important work outcomes (e.g., well-being, commitment, performance, and turnover intentions). Implications for the development of organizational research based on self-determination theory are discussed.


Journal of Research in Personality | 2003

The COPE revised: Proposing a 5-factor model of coping strategies

Miron Zuckerman; Marylène Gagné

Abstract The COPE ( Carver, Scheier, & Weintraub, 1989 ), an inventory of coping strategies, was revised by modifying one of its subscales and adding seven new ones. Factor analysis of the new questionnaire revealed five dimensions: self-help, approach, accommodation, avoidance, and self-punishment. To measure these dimensions, we constructed a 5-subscale, 40-item revised COPE (R-COPE). In subsequent studies, the 5 R-COPE subscales were predicted prospectively from one situational variable (perceived control) and one dispositional construct (autonomy versus control orientation). In additional studies, the 5 subscales served as prospective predictors of several adjustment and well being indices. These studies along with correlations between the five subscales and other variables demonstrated both convergent and discriminant validity of the R-COPE. Theoretical implications of the 5-factor solution and the case for using the R-COPE in future coping research are discussed.


Psychological Assessment | 2014

Evidence against the continuum structure underlying motivation measures derived from self-determination theory.

Emanuela Chemolli; Marylène Gagné

Self-determination theory (SDT) proposes a multidimensional conceptualization of motivation in which the different regulations are said to fall along a continuum of self-determination. The continuum has been used as a basis for using a relative autonomy index as a means to create motivational scores. Rasch analysis was used to verify the continuum structure of the Multidimensional Work Motivation Scale and of the Academic Motivation Scale. We discuss the concept of continuum against SDTs conceptualization of motivation and argue against the use of the relative autonomy index on the grounds that evidence for a continuum structure underlying the regulations is weak and because the index is statistically problematic. We suggest exploiting the full richness of SDTs multidimensional conceptualization of motivation through the use of alternative scoring methods when investigating motivational dynamics across life domains.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2012

The role of perceived organizational support, distributive justice and motivation in reactions to new information technology

Jonathan I. Mitchell; Marylène Gagné; Anne Beaudry; Linda Dyer

Despite tremendous investments in information technology (IT), many technological interventions in organizations fail because employees do not fully accept and use IT. The present study explored how perceived organizational support and distributive justice affect employee reactions to new IT from a motivational point of view. Self-determination theory was used to understand how different motivational styles, varying in degree of self-determination, mediate the relationship of perceived organizational support and distributive justice with reactions to new IT. Results showed that perceived organizational support and distributive justice were associated with intrinsic and identified motivation to use the IT, but only POS was related to enjoyment and acceptance of the IT. Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation were both associated with IT usage, but IT usage was associated with enjoyment and acceptance only when people were intrinsically motivated. Intrinsic motivation also mediated the effects of POS on enjoyment and acceptance. Moreover, intrinsically motivated users were less likely to use a paper-based appointment booking alternative than those who were not. Implications for managing IT implementations are discussed.


European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology | 2014

The study of organizational behaviour in family business

Marylène Gagné; Pramodita Sharma; Alfredo Vittorio De Massis

Family businesses (FBs)—enterprises that are significantly influenced by family members and kinship ties—are ubiquitous and play a crucial role across all world economies. Because of the embeddedness of family and business systems in FB, these organizational forms are theoretically distinct from their non-family counterparts. Curiously, FBs have been largely overlooked in the organizational behaviour (OB) literature. The limited available research at the interface of OB and FB highlights the importance of FB as a unique context to advance OB theories, and of OB as a promising discipline to increase our understanding of FB. In a selective review of literature focused on the four topics of values and goals, leadership and power, trust and justice, and conflict, we discuss how insights from the general theory of communal and exchange relationships open exciting avenues for research at the FB-OB interface. Rich fruits of intellectual harvest await scholars who focus on behavioural research in FB.

Collaboration


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Jacques Forest

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Alexandre J. S. Morin

Australian Catholic University

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Richard M. Ryan

Australian Catholic University

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Joshua L. Howard

University of Western Australia

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Emanuela Chemolli

University of Western Australia

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Anaïs Thibault Landry

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Claude Fernet

Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières

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