Abstract

Most existing measures of cohesion attempt to objectively measure cohesion while neglecting individual group members' perceptions of their cohesion to a particular group. We propose that group members' perceptions of cohesion are important for the behavior of the individual as well as the group as a whole. We offer a theoretical definition of perceived cohesion which says individuals' perceptions of their own cohesion to a group has two dimensions: sense of belonging and feelings of morale. We test this conceptualization and the adequacy of our Perceived Cohesion Scale in two random samples: students at a small college noted for its strong “school spirit” and residents of a midsized city. Our confirmatory factor analyses indicate a two-factor model, with a high degree of invariance across the two samples, and with the two dimensions correlated over .90 in both. However, as anticipated, perceived cohesion is significantly higher in the college than the city sample.

Keywords

Cohesion (chemistry)ConceptualizationSocial psychologyPsychologyGroup cohesivenessPerceptionFeelingEmpirical researchConfirmatory factor analysisStructural equation modelingMathematicsComputer scienceStatistics

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
69
Issue
2
Pages
479-504
Citations
620
Access
Closed

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620
OpenAlex
87
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Cite This

Kenneth A. Bollen, Rick H. Hoyle (1990). Perceived Cohesion: A Conceptual and Empirical Examination. Social Forces , 69 (2) , 479-504. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/69.2.479

Identifiers

DOI
10.1093/sf/69.2.479

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%