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    Team resilience emergence: Perspectives and experiences of military personnel selected for elite military training

    91985.pdf (790.2Kb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Chapman, Michael
    Temby, P.
    Crane, M.
    Ntoumanis, Nikos
    Quested, Eleanor
    Thogersen-Ntoumani, Cecilie
    Parker, Sharon
    Ducker, Kagan
    Peeling, P.
    Gucciardi, Daniel
    Date
    2021
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Chapman, M.T. and Temby, P. and Crane, M. and Ntoumanis, N. and Quested, E. and Thøgersen-Ntoumani, C. and Parker, S.K. et al. 2021. Team resilience emergence: Perspectives and experiences of military personnel selected for elite military training. European Journal of Social Psychology. 51 (6): pp. 951-968.
    Source Title
    European Journal of Social Psychology
    DOI
    10.1002/ejsp.2795
    ISSN
    0046-2772
    Faculty
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    Faculty of Business and Law
    School
    Curtin School of Allied Health
    Curtin School of Population Health
    Future of Work Institute
    Funding and Sponsorship
    http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FL160100033
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/92161
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    We conducted a longitudinal (3-month) qualitative study to examine elite military personnel's (N = 32) experiences and perspectives of team resilience emergence following two team-oriented training courses within an 18-month high-stakes training programme where personnel are required to operate in newly formed tactical teams for extended periods. Our thematically informed interpretations of the participants’ subjective experiences of reality were constructed according to five key themes: (i) adversity is an enduring, shared experience of an event; (ii) individuals recognise adversity through physiological and/or behavioural states; (iii) social resources bind together individual self-regulatory capacities when confronted with adversity to support team functioning; (iv) shared experiences of adversity and collective structures strengthen social bonds and mental models needed for resilience emergence; and (v) behavioural processes and shared states are how collectives turn individual and team capacities into performance under adversity. These findings provide novel insights that supplement our current understanding of team resilience emergence, including the varying means by which adversity may be collectively experienced, synergies between specific forms of adversity and resilience processes or protective factors, and the unique influence of performance context (e.g., task type).

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