“…It is worth noting that, these values are comparable to those ICC values reported in the organizational behavior literature (see Bliese, 2000; Liao & Chuang, 2007; Qin, Hom, & Xu, in press; Schneider, White, & Paul, 1998). Some scholars suggested that relatively low ICC[2] should not prevent aggregation if aggregation can be justified by theory and high r wg and significant between-group variance (Chen & Bliese, 2002; Kozlowski & Hattrup, 1992; Qin, Ren, Zhang, & Johnson, 2018). Thus, we conducted the aggregation, while acknowledging that “the relationships between the aggregated measures with low ICC[2] and the other study variables might be underestimated” (Liao & Chuang, 2007, p. 1012).…”