Why and for whom cyber incivility affects task performance? Exploring the intrapersonal processes and a personal boundary condition

IF 4.9 2区 管理学 Q1 MANAGEMENT
Xing Wang, Tae-Yeol Kim, Hongli Li
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Abstract

Although cyber incivility (i.e., an interpersonal workplace stressor displayed through uncivil behaviors manifested in online working communication) occurs every day in the workplace, we know little about how it influences employees’ task performance at daily level, nor why and when this influence occurs. To address these limitations, we theorized and tested a model that links cyber incivility to task performance via negative affect and sleep quality at daily level and a cross-level boundary condition at the person level (i.e., self-leadership). Multilevel modeling results based on data collected from 112 full-time employees with 866 observations suggest that daily cyber incivility has a time-lagged effect on task performance of the following day after controlling for task performance the same day. This intrapersonal effect can be explained by the induced negative affect of the following workday but not sleep quality of the previous night. In addition, the relationship between cyber incivility and negative affect and the indirect effect of cyber incivility on task performance via negative affect were weaker among employees with high rather than low self-leadership.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

为什么以及对谁来说,网络不文明会影响任务执行?探索个人内部过程和个人边界条件
尽管网络不文明行为(即通过在线工作交流中的不文明行为表现出来的一种人际工作压力)每天都在工作场所发生,但我们对它如何影响员工的日常任务绩效,以及这种影响发生的原因和时间却知之甚少。为了解决这些局限性,我们建立并测试了一个模型,该模型通过日常层面的消极情绪和睡眠质量以及个人层面的跨层次边界条件(即自我领导力)将网络不文明行为与任务绩效联系起来。多层次建模结果基于从 112 名全职员工中收集的 866 个观测数据,表明在控制了当天的任务绩效后,每天的网络不文明行为对第二天的任务绩效具有时滞效应。这种人际间的影响可以用第二天工作日的负面情绪来解释,而不是用前一晚的睡眠质量来解释。此外,网络不文明行为与消极情绪之间的关系,以及网络不文明行为通过消极情绪对任务绩效的间接影响,在自我领导力高的员工中比在自我领导力低的员工中更弱。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
9.30%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: The Asia Pacific Journal of Management publishes original manuscripts on management and organizational research in the Asia Pacific region, encompassing Pacific Rim countries and mainland Asia. APJM focuses on the extent to which each manuscript addresses matters that pertain to the most fundamental question: “What determines organization success?” The major academic disciplines that we cover include entrepreneurship, human resource management, international business, organizational behavior, and strategic management. However, manuscripts that belong to other well-established disciplines such as accounting, economics, finance, marketing, and operations generally do not fall into the scope of APJM. We endeavor to be the major vehicle for exchange of ideas and research among management scholars within or interested in the broadly defined Asia Pacific region.Key features include: Rigor - maintained through strict review processes, high quality global reviewers, and Editorial Advisory and Review Boards comprising prominent researchers from many countries. Relevance - maintained by its focus on key management and organizational trends in the region. Uniqueness - being the first and most prominent management journal published in and about the fastest growing region in the world. Official affiliation - Asia Academy of ManagementFor more information, visit the AAOM website:www.baf.cuhk.edu.hk/asia-aom/ Officially cited as: Asia Pac J Manag
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