The Role of Safety Motivation in Safety Performance Model: A Multilevel Model from a Self-determination Theory Perspective

  • JIANG L
  • LI Y
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Abstract

The study was designed to test the effect of safety climate on safety behavior among lone employees whose work environment promotes individual rather than consensual or shared climate perceptions. The paper presents a mediation path model linking psychological (individual-level) safety climate antecedents and consequences as predictors of driving safety of long-haul truck drivers. Climate antecedents included dispatcher (distant) leadership and driver work ownership, two contextual attributes of lone work, whereas its proximal consequence included driving safety. Using a prospective design, safety outcomes, consisting of hard-braking frequency (i.e. traffic near-miss events) were collected six months after survey completion, using GPS-based truck deceleration data. Results supported the hypothesized model, indicating that distant leadership style and work ownership promote psychological safety climate perceptions, with subsequent prediction of hard-braking events mediated by driving safety. Theoretical and practical implications for studying safety climate among lone workers in general and professional drivers in particular are discussed.

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JIANG, L., & LI, Y.-J. (2013). The Role of Safety Motivation in Safety Performance Model: A Multilevel Model from a Self-determination Theory Perspective. Advances in Psychological Science, 20(1), 35–44. https://doi.org/10.3724/sp.j.1042.2012.00035

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