Figure 2. Mediated models showing simple effects for men and women and for low and high centrality. For each model, X represents feedback, M signifies satisfaction, and Y indicates commitment. Coefficients in boldface were significantly different (p .05) across levels of themoderator variable (i.e., gender for Panels A and B, centrality for Panels C and D). Panels A andB show that gender moderated the paths from feedback to satisfaction and satisfaction to commitment, both of which were larger for men than for women. Panels C and D indicate that centrality moderated all three paths relating feedback, satisfaction, and commitment, which were larger when centrality was low than when it was high.