Assessing Leadership Style: Trait Analysis

(Ron) #1
Measuring the Motives of Political Actors at a Distance

able guide to the leader's personality, //they are useful in predicting
or interpreting the author's behavior. However, that very same con-
ditional also applies to any other method of making inferences about
the personality of a leader or, indeed, any other person.
Factors such as audience, campaign issues, popular mood, cultural
values, and political stereotypes do affect speech content, but there is
evidence that by themselves they do not wholly determine motive
imagery scores (see Hermann 198oa, 344; Winter and Stewart
1977a, 51). Thus it is possible for a political leader to talk about top-
ics such as the economy, national heritage, and even war and peace
from almost any manifest policy perspective and either use or not use
achievement, affiliation, or power images. In other words, the motive
imagery scoring systems seem to pick up the subtle shades of image
or emphasis that reflect personal factors rather than merely reflecting
the common currency of cultural symbols or ideological stances.


Reliability
Since the motive imagery content analysis system was derived from
TAT scoring systems, which have a reputation for low test-retest
reliability (see Entwisle 1972), many readers may wonder whether
this at-a-distance technique is reliable. Actually, several researchers
have shown that the common impression of low TAT reliability is
not, in fact, accurate (Smith 1992, 126-39; Winter and Stewart
1977b). Moreover, Winter (1991, 70—71) has shown that the at-a-
distance adaptation of these scoring systems gives split-half over-
time reliability coefficients in the range of .62 to .77, which suggests
considerable temporal stability.

Translation
The research that has been done on the effects of translation on
motive imagery scores (Hermann 198ob, 352 n. 2; Winter 1973,
92-93) suggests that translated documents yield about the same
scores as originals, so long as the translation was a careful one.

Final Cautions
While the motive imagery scoring procedure has furnished useful
insights in case studies and useful generalizations in research on
groups, some final cautions about the technique are in order. We
Free download pdf