Episodes of incivility between subordinates and supervisors: examining the role of self-control and time with an interaction-record diary study
Author(s)
Date issued
2015
In
Journal of Organizational Behavior
Vol
36
No
8
From page
1096
To page
1113
Subjects
incivility self-control exhaustion interaction records diary study
Abstract
Scholars have hypothesized that experiencing incivility not only negatively affects well-being, but may eventrigger further antisocial behavior. Previous research, however, has focused mainly on the relation betweenincivility and well-being. Thus, little is known about the behavioral consequences of incivility. With this inmind, we conducted an interaction-record diary study to examine whether supervisor incivility causes retal-iatory incivility against the supervisor. Using the self-control strength model as a framework, we further ex-amined whether the target’s trait (trait self-control) and state (exhaustion) self-regulatory capacities moderatethis effect. In addition, we examined the role of time by testing the duration of the effect. When we analyzedthe full data set, we found no support for our hypotheses. However, using a subset of the data in which thesubsequent interaction happened on the same day as the prior interaction, our results showed that experienc-ing incivility predicted incivility in the subsequent interaction, but only when the time lag between the twointeractions was short. Furthermore, in line with the assumption that self-regulatory capacities are requiredto restrain a target from retaliatory responses, the effect was stronger when individuals were exhausted. Incontrast to our assumption, trait self-control had no effect on instigated incivility.
Publication type
journal article
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J Organ Behavior - 2015 - Meier.pdf
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