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Team Psychological Safety Measurement

Team psychological safety is the shared belief among members of a team that the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking — that one can speak up, ask questions, admit mistakes, and propose ideas without fear of being embarrassed, rejected, or punished. Amy Edmondson introduced and measured the construct in her 1999 Administrative Science Quarterly study of work teams in a manufacturing company, showing that it is a property of the team, not just the individual, and that it enables team learning behavior. Her measurement approach treats psychological safety as a latent belief captured by self-report items, aggregated to the team level once within-team agreement justifies it. The pivotal finding was that psychological safety predicts learning behavior, which in turn mediates the relationship between safety and team performance. The construct has since become central to research and practice on teams, learning, and high-reliability work.

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  1. Edmondson, A. (1999). Psychological safety and learning behavior in work teams. Administrative Science Quarterly, 44(2), 350-383. DOI: 10.2307/2666999

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ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Team Psychological Safety Measurement (Shared Belief in Interpersonal Risk-Taking). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/et/organizational-behavior/psychological-safety-measurement

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ScholarGateTeam Psychological Safety Measurement (Team Psychological Safety Measurement (Shared Belief in Interpersonal Risk-Taking)). Loetud 2026-06-24 aadressilt https://scholargate.app/et/organizational-behavior/psychological-safety-measurement · Andmestik: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026