Table of Contents
Abstract
The Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ) is a psychological scale initially developed by J. Weitz in 1952 and later significantly adapted and utilized by researchers like Timothy A. Judge and Charles L. Hulin in the 1990s. Its primary function is to measure an individual’s dispositional tendency toward general satisfaction or dissatisfaction with various common, often mundane, aspects of life that are considered relatively neutral. These items are typically independent of specific professional performance or deeply personal life domains, allowing the instrument to serve as a proxy for underlying affective disposition. The NOSQ is frequently employed in organizational psychology research to examine how stable personality traits influence specific attitudes, such as job satisfaction, often demonstrating that satisfaction with neutral objects correlates positively with satisfaction in domain-specific areas like work.
Keywords
Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire, NOSQ, Job Satisfaction, Dispositional Affect, Affective Disposition, General Satisfaction, Psychological Assessment, Weitz, Judge & Hulin.
Authors
Joseph Weitz, Timothy A. Judge, Charles L. Hulin, Kevin J. Eschleman, Nathan A. Bowling.
[quads id=5]
Purpose
The central purpose of the NOSQ is to provide a reliable measure of an individual’s general dispositional satisfaction—the inherent tendency of a person to be satisfied or dissatisfied across diverse life circumstances. Weitz (1952) introduced the concept of measuring satisfaction with items unrelated to the primary domain of interest (specifically, job satisfaction) to isolate the influence of stable individual differences. The scale aims to capture satisfaction levels regarding objects and situations that are universally encountered but which hold relatively low personal salience compared to major life events or career performance.
By measuring satisfaction with these neutral objects, researchers can better separate trait-based satisfaction (disposition) from state-based satisfaction (reaction to a specific environment, like a job). This separation is critical for accurately modeling the relationship between personality, environment, and specific domain satisfaction, such as predicting voluntary turnover or overall career success.
Construct
The NOSQ primarily measures a facet of Affective Disposition, often conceptualized as a stable personality trait reflecting a general tendency toward positive or negative emotional states. When applied in occupational psychology, this construct is treated as a measure of dispositional satisfaction. The assumption underlying the NOSQ is that if an individual reports high satisfaction with truly neutral objects (e.g., paper size, telephone service), this satisfaction reflects a generalized, endogenous positive outlook rather than a response to specific environmental stimuli or rewards.
Research, particularly by Judge and Hulin (1993), has established that this measure of dispositional satisfaction is highly predictive of job satisfaction, suggesting that happiness in the workplace is, to a significant extent, a reflection of a deeper, pre-existing disposition rather than solely a reaction to organizational conditions. The items are chosen specifically to minimize relevance to organizational factors, thereby purifying the measure of the underlying dispositional construct.
Validity
The construct validity of the NOSQ has been investigated across several studies, particularly concerning its relationship with other measures of disposition and job-related attitudes. Studies, such as those by Eschleman and Bowling (2011), have provided evidence supporting the NOSQ’s validity as a measure of dispositional affect. Specifically, the NOSQ has demonstrated significant correlations with established measures of personality traits, such as those within the Five-Factor Model, aligning particularly well with measures of Neuroticism (negatively) and Conscientiousness (positively).
Furthermore, its predictive validity is strong in the context of organizational research, where scores consistently predict future job satisfaction and organizational outcomes like turnover, even after controlling for job characteristics. This supports the notion that the NOSQ successfully captures a stable trait that influences how individuals perceive and respond to their environments, confirming its role as an indicator of affective disposition.
Reliability
Measures of internal consistency, typically using Cronbach’s alpha, indicate that the NOSQ possesses acceptable to good reliability. Although the scale covers a wide range of seemingly unrelated items (heterogeneous content), which might typically lower internal consistency, the fact that all items load onto a general factor of dispositional satisfaction maintains adequate coherence. The reliability estimates often fall in the range of 0.70 to 0.85, depending on the specific sample and the version of the scale used (e.g., the 44-item Weitz version or the shorter 25-item Judge & Hulin version).
Test-retest reliability is also a critical consideration for a scale intended to measure a stable dispositional trait. Longitudinal studies have shown that NOSQ scores exhibit high temporal stability over periods of several months or years, reinforcing its utility as a measure of enduring psychological disposition rather than transient mood or situation-specific satisfaction.
Factor Analysis
Initial factor analyses of the Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ) were crucial in establishing its unidimensionality, supporting the theory that satisfaction across diverse, neutral objects reflects a single, underlying general disposition. While the items are highly varied (ranging from political situations to paper size), the primary finding is that a single factor—General Dispositional Satisfaction—accounts for a significant portion of the variance. This single-factor structure is essential for the scale’s theoretical application as a pure measure of disposition.
Later validation studies, including confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), have generally confirmed the adequacy of the unidimensional structure, especially for the shortened versions of the scale (Judge & Hulin, 1993; Eschleman & Bowling, 2011). Although some minor factors related to broad categories (e.g., local environment, media) might emerge, the overwhelming evidence supports scoring the NOSQ as a single, global measure of dispositional affect.
Instrument
Test Type: Self-report questionnaire / Psychological scale
Format: The respondent rates their level of satisfaction with each item. The scoring typically uses a 3-point Likert scale: 1= Dissatisfied, 2= Neutral, 3= Satisfied. Total scores are summed or averaged across items to yield a single measure of dispositional satisfaction.
Language Available: Primarily English.
Population Group: General adult population, frequently used in organizational and working populations.
Age Group: Adults (18+).
Population Details: Has been validated across diverse samples of employees and university students, demonstrating utility in various demographic and organizational settings.
Test Methodology: Paper-and-pencil or digital administration, requiring respondents to quickly evaluate their satisfaction with a series of neutral objects and situations.
Keywords
Dispositional satisfaction, Organizational Psychology, Psychological Assessment, Affective Disposition, Personality Measurement, Weitz 1952, Judge & Hulin 1993, Likert Scale, Test Validity, Test Reliability.
[quads id=5]
Authors
Author ORCID Identifier: Not consistently provided in source materials; requires external lookup for specific researchers (e.g., Timothy A. Judge).
Affiliation Email addresses: Not consistently provided in source materials.
Correspondence Address: Correspondence for contemporary versions often directed to Timothy A. Judge (e.g., University of Florida or relevant institution at the time of publication).
Permissions & Fee and Test Year
The original instrument was published by Weitz in 1952. The most commonly cited and used adaptation was published by Judge and Hulin in 1993. Given its age and status as an academic instrument published in peer-reviewed journals, the scale is often available for non-commercial academic research use without direct fees, though researchers must appropriately cite the source. The full instrument and details are often made available by the authors for research purposes. The original PDF describing the instrument can be downloaded here: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.706.5754&rep=rep1&type=pdf
Reference’s
Weitz, J. (1952). A neglected concept in the study of job satisfaction. Personnel Psychology, 5, 201-205.
Judge, T. A. (1992). Does Affective Disposition Moderate the Relationship Between Job Satisfaction and Voluntary Turnover? (CAHRS Working Paper #92-19). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University, School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Center for Advanced Human Resource Studies. Available at: http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/cahrswp/303
Judge, T. A., & Hulin, C. L. (1993). Job satisfaction as a reflection of disposition: A multiple‑source causal analysis. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 56, 388-421.
Eschleman, Kevin J., & Bowling, Nathan A. (2011). A Construct Validation of the Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ). J Bus Psychol, 26:501–515.
Additional resource for the instrument: http://www.timothy-judge.com/NOSQ.htm
[quads id=5]
Items of the Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ)
Weitz (1952) 44-Item Version:
- The city in which you live
- The house or apartment in which you live
- The area of the city in which you live
- The high school you attended
- The climate where you live
- The movies being produced
- Local political situation
- National political situation
- Our foreign policy
- Your last job
- Food prices
- Today’s automobiles
- Opportunities to get ahead
- Local newspapers
- Automobile prices
- The last suit you bought
- The amount of time you have for recreation
- Your last boss
- The college you attended
- Your first name
- The people you know
- Radio programs
- Television programs
- Local speed limits
- The way people drive
- The way local traffic is handled
- Your present job
- Advertising methods
- The way you were raised
- Telephone service
- Income tax
- Public transportation
- General public attitude toward voting
- The school your child is attending
- Restaurant food
- Sales tax
- Women’s clothing styles
- Yourself
- Contemporary art
- Popular music
- Movie censorship
- Book censorship
- 8½” x 11″ paper
- Your telephone number
Judge & Hulin (1993) 25-Item Version:
- The city in which you live
- The residence where you live
- The neighbors you have
- The high school you attended
- The climate where you live
- The movies produced today
- The quality of food you buy
- Today’s cars
- Local newspapers
- Your relaxation time
- Your first name
- The people you know
- Television programs
- Local speed limits
- The way people drive
- Advertising
- The way you were raised
- Telephone service
- Public transportation
- Restaurant food
- Yourself
- Modern art
- Popular music
- 8½” x 11″ paper
- Your telephone number
Cite this article
Mohammed looti (2025). Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ). Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Retrieved from https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/neutral-objects-satisfaction-questionnaire-nosq/
Mohammed looti. "Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ)." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 9 Oct. 2025, https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/neutral-objects-satisfaction-questionnaire-nosq/.
Mohammed looti. "Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ)." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 2025. https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/neutral-objects-satisfaction-questionnaire-nosq/.
Mohammed looti (2025) 'Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ)', Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Available at: https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/neutral-objects-satisfaction-questionnaire-nosq/.
[1] Mohammed looti, "Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ)," Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, October, 2025.
Mohammed looti. Neutral Objects Satisfaction Questionnaire (NOSQ). Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. 2025;vol(issue):pages.