谁还击?日常调查:何时以及为何无礼行为引发无礼行为

Who strikes back? A daily investigation of when and why incivility begets incivility.

Journal of Applied Psychology · 2016
被引 286 · 同刊同年前 4%
FT 50ABS 4★

中文导读

研究通过两周经验取样发现,员工上午遭遇无礼行为会降低自我控制,进而导致下午对他人实施无礼行为;组织政治加剧此过程,而高解释水平则削弱自我控制下降与无礼行为的关系。

Abstract

Incivility at work-low intensity deviant behaviors with an ambiguous intent to harm-has been on the rise, yielding negative consequences for employees' well-being and companies' bottom-lines. Although examinations of incivility have gained momentum in organizational research, theory and empirical tests involving dynamic, within-person processes associated with this negative interpersonal behavior are limited. Drawing from ego depletion theory, we test how experiencing incivility precipitates instigating incivility toward others at work via reduced self-control. Using an experience sampling design across 2 work weeks, we found that experiencing incivility earlier in the day reduced one's levels of self-control (captured via a performance-based measure of self-control), which in turn resulted in increased instigated incivility later in the day. Moreover, organizational politics-a stable, environmental factor-strengthened the relation between experienced incivility and reduced self-control, whereas construal level-a stable, personal factor-weakened the relation between reduced self-control and instigated incivility. Combined, our results yield multiple theoretical, empirical, and practical implications for the study of incivility at work. (PsycINFO Database Record

职场无礼行为自我控制组织政治解释水平经验取样法