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在工作中获得社会奖励还是惩罚?披露积极非工作事件对社会评价和职场八卦的混合声誉影响

Socially rewarded or penalized at work? The mixed reputational implications of disclosing one’s positive nonwork events on social evaluations and workplace gossip.

Journal of Applied Psychology · 2026
被引 0
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

研究员工分享积极非工作事件如何影响同事评价和职场八卦,发现分享者更易被视为关注他人而获正面八卦,但低地位员工更易被认为分心而遭负面八卦。

Abstract

, we draw from boundary theory to investigate whether disclosers gain and/or lose social value at work because such capitalization is evaluated against normative expectations around the work-nonwork boundary. Specifically, we theorize that nonwork-work interpersonal capitalization carries mixed reputational implications for disclosers in terms of how they are evaluated by coworkers (i.e., perceived as other-focused and/or distracted from work) and, in turn, how coworkers spread evaluative information of disclosers to others (i.e., in terms of positive and/or negative workplace gossip about disclosers). Moreover, we propose that such reputational implications will be moderated by the discloser's workplace status. We test our model using a source- and time-separated field study (Study 1) and an experimental causal chain design (Study 2). Both studies showed that disclosers of positive nonwork events are more likely to be perceived as other-focused and thereby become targets of positive gossip. Across both studies, the effect of nonwork-work interpersonal capitalization on being perceived as distracted was stronger for lower status employees, who in turn were more likely to be gossiped about negatively. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved).

组织行为学人际沟通职场八卦社会评价工作与非工作边界