Abstract:
A concurrent validity study was conducted using the Conditional Reasoning Test for
Workplace Psychopathy (CRT-WP), with a sample of military members within the Canadian
Armed Forces (CAF). The CRT-WP is a newly developed implicit measure of subclinical
psychopathy which has shown resistance to impression management (Cook & Roulin, 2021).
Higher levels of psychopathy in the workplace have been associated with adverse outcomes such
as toxic leadership, bullying, negative employee wellbeing as well as many other harmful
consequences (Boddy, 2014). The criteria that were assessed against the CRT-WP were integrity
(via personality factors), counterproductive work behaviour, transformational leadership and
organizational citizenship behaviour.
The CRT-WP was found to relate with personality and behavioural factors relevant to
integrity which were in line with tendencies typically observed in those higher in psychopathy. It
was also able to predict acts of counterproductive work behaviour and abuse. It should be noted
that all observed significant relationships achieved small effect sizes. Most notably the CRT-WP
displayed incremental validity over integrity measures being investigated within the Canadian
Military, in assessing workplace deviance and abuse and was deemed to be important in
predicting abusive workplace behaviours. The results of this study give more support for the
CRT-WP’s viability in selection settings as this implicit measure has shown promise to predict
abusive acts, conduct associated with many detrimental impacts for employees.