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Chief executive officer (CEO) Machiavellianism and executive pay. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-12
Tessa Recendes,Aaron D Hill,Federico Aime,Jason W Ridge,Oleg V PetrenkoIntegrating theory and evidence about Machiavellianism (Mach) into executive pay-setting research, we theorize about how chief executive officers (CEOs) higher in Mach may be both more motivated to initiate negotiations and more effective in utilizing social influence tactics in the pay-setting process, thus positively relating to their own pay outcomes. Specifically, we first theorize that CEO Mach
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The mitigation-signaling model: An integrative conceptual review of allyship behaviors' consequences for marginalized individuals. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Alyssa Tedder-King,Melanie K Prengler,Elad N SherfWorkplace disparities persist for marginalized individuals-people from groups historically excluded from dominant social, economic, educational, and/or cultural life-who report lower well-being, strained relationships, and worse career outcomes compared to their advantaged counterparts. Allyship behaviors, often defined as actions by advantaged individuals to support marginalized individuals, have
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When voice takes destructive rather than constructive forms in manager-employee dyads: A power-dependence perspective. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Jing Wu,Subrahmaniam Tangirala,Pengcheng ZhangWe offer a relational perspective on how power shapes voice in the employee-manager dyad. We argue that to properly understand the impact of employees' power on voice, it must be analyzed alongside the power held by their managers. We propose that although voice increases when employees hold high power, its form-whether constructive or destructive-depends on their managers' power. We posit that employees'
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Can allostatic load cross over? Short-term work and nonwork stressor pile-up on parent and adolescent diurnal cortisol, physical symptoms, and sleep. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Kimberly A French,Claire E Smith,Soomi Lee,Zheng ChenGrounded in and expanding upon the allostatic load model, the present study examined how repeated exposure to work and nonwork stressors (i.e., stressor pile-up) across an 8-day study period relates to daily strain-related outcomes-diurnal cortisol, physical symptoms, and sleep quantity and quality-in both parents and their adolescent children. Nonlinear associations between daily stressor pile-up
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On the efficacy of psychological separation to address common method variance: Experimental evidence and a guiding research design framework. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Alex L Rubenstein,Lauren S Simon,John D Kammeyer-Mueller,Emily S Corwin,Hayley M Morrison,Steven W WhitingCommon method variance (CMV) substantially impacts how scholars conduct and review research. Several procedural and statistical remedies have been proposed to address the potential biasing effects that can result from CMV in data procured from a single source on a single occasion. Among them, temporal separation and distinct source designs have been the most popular. Psychological separation (PS) has
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Addressing the diversity-validity dilemma in personnel selection: Unraveling the impact of multipenalty optimized regression in varied testing scenarios. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Andrew B Speer,Louis Hickman,Q Chelsea Song,James Perrotta,Rick R Jacobs,Dawn LambertResearchers and practitioners have long grappled with balancing the goals of selecting a high-performing and diverse workforce. Recently, Rottman et al. (2023) proposed a new approach to address these goals, which we refer to as multipenalty optimized regression (MOR). MOR extends ridge regression by adding a penalty term that minimizes group differences when fitting the model. Although MOR has shown
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Do not put all of your eggs in one basket: Multiverse analysis in applied psychology. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Jens Mazei,Cort W Rudolph,Hannes Zacher,Joachim HüffmeierA multiverse analysis allows researchers to systematically evaluate the support for a hypothesis across a range of sensible ways in which data can be prepared for statistical analysis and/or be analyzed. Accordingly, multiverse analysis provides insights into the relevance of different approaches to, for instance, dealing with outliers or attrition, creating scales, or using different measures for
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Buffered by reflected glory? The effects of star connections on career outcomes. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Lei Liu,Martin Kilduff,Sun Young Lee,Colin M FisherConnections to exceptionally high-performing industry stars facilitate individuals' job attainment. But what are the career consequences for people who benefit initially from star connections? Using balance theory, we integrate social network and basking-in-reflected glory research to examine how high expectations resulting from the persistence of reflected glory affect the evaluation of star-connected
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Interracial frontline encounters: How White customers' stereotype threat affects Black frontline employees' immediate job outcomes. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Sven Mikolon,Katharina Dinhof,Janet Kleber,Till HaumannInterracial interactions are often laden with concerns about being assimilated by group stereotypes. This study examines the "White-and-prejudiced" stereotype threat, which can be triggered in White customers when interacting with Black frontline employees. Our findings, derived from two field studies and two experiments, reveal short-term positive effects of the White stereotype threat on the job
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Correction to "The dynamics of gender and alternatives in negotiation" by Dannals et al. (2021). Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Reports an error in "The dynamics of gender and alternatives in negotiation" by Jennifer E. Dannals, Julian J. Zlatev, Nir Halevy and Margaret A. Neale (Journal of Applied Psychology, 2021[Nov], Vol 106[11], 1655-1672). In the article, "† p < .10" and "*** p < .001" were removed from the notes for Tables 3, 4, and 5. In Table 6, five values in the "Total dyads" column and three values in the "% Impasses"
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Equity, openness, rigor, impact, and investing in people: The Journal of Applied Psychology's values in action. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Lillian T EbyIn this editorial, the author states that the Journal of Applied Psychology (JAP) publishes original empirical, theoretical, and conceptual research that advances our understanding of affective, motivational, cognitive, and behavioral phenomena in the context of work or employment. In terms of its values, JAP strongly endorses the American Psychological Association (APA) journals' commitment to equity
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Range restriction corrections in personnel selection: A mixed range restriction correction approach to overcome a key limitation in applying Case V. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-27
Huy Le,In-Sue Oh,Philip L Roth,Frank L SchmidtRecent advancements in range restriction (RR) correction research suggest that Case V (Dahlke & Wiernik, 2020; Le et al., 2016) is one of the most accurate approaches to correct for (indirect) RR. However, researchers have had difficulty applying the Case V approach, especially in validation and meta-analytic (including validity generalization) studies, because of the lack of information regarding
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The relative effects of design thinking versus after-action review on team performance: An experiential/episodic team learning perspective. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-27
Jingqiu Chen,Dana R Vashdi,Qingyue Fan,Peter A Bamberger,Gilad ChenIn an effort to extend experiential learning theory to the team level, we develop and test a model capturing and explaining the relative effects of two alternative team learning-based interventions, namely, after-action reviews (AAR) and design thinking (DT; a team problem-solving approach which we argue can be repurposed as a team development intervention). Integrating experiential learning theory
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History and leadership: How a head monk uses historical narratives to facilitate change in a Buddhist temple. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-20
Hee-Chan SongLeadership and historical narrative studies suggest that leaders strategically use history as a source of narratives to facilitate change. Yet the dynamic microprocess of how leaders craft and recraft their historical narratives to shift the organizational members' understanding of current reality and thereby facilitate change remains unexplored. Using the case of a Korean Buddhist temple that confronts
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In sync or out of tune? The effects of workplace music misfit on employees. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-20
Kathleen R Keeler,Harshad Puranik,Yue Wang,Jingfeng YinEmployees, especially in the service sector, often work long hours exposed to background music that they have little control over because it is usually selected to enhance customer experience. How does this affect employees' daily work experience? This research focuses on how a misfit between the type of music employees need and the background music played in their workplace impacts their psychological
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A spectrum of bystander actions: Latent profile analysis of sexual harassment intervention behavior at work. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-20
Yijue Liang,YoungAh ParkSexual harassment bystander intervention (SHBI) has been deemed critical to addressing persistent incidents in the workplace, yet scholarly knowledge of this behavior remains sporadic and limited. To move this field of research forward, the present study departs from the traditional variable-centered approach and instead adopts a latent profile approach to answer three key questions: (1) Which combinations
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Breaking ceilings: Debate training promotes leadership emergence by increasing assertiveness. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-10
Jackson G Lu,Michelle X Zhao,Hui Liao,Lu Doris ZhangTo date, little is known about what interventions can help individuals attain leadership roles in organizations. To address this knowledge gap, we integrate insights from the communication and leadership literatures to test debate training as a novel intervention for leadership emergence. We propose that debate training can increase individuals' leadership emergence by fostering assertiveness-"an adaptive
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It's not a cedar tree, therefore it's not a tree: A commentary on Yao and Ma (2023). Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Fadel K Matta,Emma L FrankYao and Ma (2023) recently reviewed and reanalyzed 31 studies published in top-tier journals utilizing polynomial regression and response surface methods. Their work offers a useful holistic framework for how to test and categorize various forms of congruence; however, they ultimately advance cautionary conclusions about the extent to which 28 of the 31 studies provide "evidence of congruence" and
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Not every part of a tree is a tree: A reply to Matta and Frank (2025). Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Yongheng Angus Yao,Zhenzhong MaOur recent article on congruence research (Yao & Ma, 2023) advocated the need to adopt a holistic approach to studying congruence effects and to developing stronger congruence theories. Matta and Frank (2025) offered an insightful commentary on our article, highlighting theoretical and empirical/inferential concerns. These concerns include (a) whether the exact correspondence effect is the theoretical
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After shocks: The effects of internal sourcing on voluntary turnover. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Jay H Hardy,Chase E Thiel,Carter Gibson,Anthony C Klotz,Andrew BarsaPromoting internal employees to managerial positions (internal sourcing) is a popular employee retention tactic. Although some research indicates that internal sourcing reduces voluntary turnover, conflicting evidence suggests that internal sourcing strategies make employees more difficult to retain in strong job markets (i.e., when job opportunities are plentiful relative to job seekers) because promotions
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Combat poison with "poison": Leader-targeted negative team gossip mitigates the detrimental team consequences of abusive supervision climate. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Rui Zhong,Lingtao Yu,Jinlong Zhu,Li ZhuExisting research presents mixed perspectives on the impact of abusive supervision climate on team processes and effectiveness. This discrepancy prompts an important question: when, why, and how does abusive supervision climate become more or less detrimental to teams? By integrating the social functional perspective of gossip with recent theoretical advancements on abusive supervision climate, we
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The role of permission in the employee proactivity process. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-02-24
Mustafa Akben,Ryan M VogelThe predominant view in the employee proactivity literature highlights the importance of personality as well as a trio of agentic forces-namely, "can do," "reason to," and "energized to" motivation-that drive employee proactive behavior. Complementing existing theoretical frameworks, we introduce the concept of proactivity permission, defined as an employee's tacit perception of the extent to which
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Are unions friends or foes of high-performance work systems? Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
David Jinwoo Chung,Tae-Youn ParkDo unions facilitate or hamper the effectiveness of high-performance work systems (HPWS)? Despite the long-standing interest among labor and human resource scholars on this matter, relevant studies are limited and dated. This research investigates whether and how the interplay between HPWS and unions affects both organizational performance and employee well-being outcomes. The authors argue while unions
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Contexts, people, and work designs: Developing and testing a multilevel theory for understanding variability in work design consequences. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-23
Erich C Dierdorff,J Kemp Ellington,Frederick P MorgesonWork design scholarship has demonstrated that work characteristics are important determinants of a wide range of individual outcomes including well-being, motivation, satisfaction, and performance. Yet this scholarship has also revealed substantial and unaccounted for variance in these effects, prompting calls for theory and research that applies multilevel and contextual perspectives to expand our
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From moral exemplar to underperformer? The double-edged sword of ethical leadership for leader in-role and extra-role performance. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-20
Grace Ching Chi Ho,David T Welsh,John T BushGiven the overall positive influence ethical leaders have on their followers' performance, the literature has largely assumed that ethical leadership also facilitates the performance of leaders themselves. We challenge this assumption by adopting a within-person perspective to reveal more nuanced relationships between distinct forms of daily ethical leadership and daily leader performance. Building
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A comparison of the response-pattern-based faking detection methods. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-20
Weiwen Nie,Ivan Hernandez,Louis Tay,Bo Zhang,Mengyang CaoThe covariance index method, the idiosyncratic item response method, and the machine learning method are the three primary response-pattern-based (RPB) approaches to detect faking on personality tests. However, less is known about how their performance is affected by different practical factors (e.g., scale length, training sample size, proportion of faking participants) and when they perform optimally
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The gendered nature of leader behaviors: Navigating stereotype threat from conservation of resources and gender role perspectives. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-20
Szu-Han Joanna Lin,Justin P Woodall,Marie S Mitchell,Nai-Wen Chi,Russell E JohnsonPrevious research has highlighted the benefits followers gain from their leaders' initiating structure and consideration. Adopting a leader-centric perspective, we propose that leaders' gender influences the impact of these behaviors for leaders themselves. Drawing from conservation of resources and gender role theories, we explain why gender-role-inconsistent leader behaviors (behaviors that go against
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I need a vacation: A meta-analysis of vacation and employee well-being. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-20
Ryan S Grant,Beth E Buchanan,Kristen M ShockleyPrevious meta-analytic research concluded that the well-being benefits of vacation are small and fade away quickly, suggesting that vacation may not be that effective of a recovery opportunity for improving employee well-being. Since the time of this initial meta-analysis, however, the number of vacation studies has increased, providing an opportunity to estimate more precise meta-analytic estimates
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Group differences in biographical inventories: A meta-analysis on the adverse impact potential of biodata. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-16
Andrew P Tenbrink,Andrew B Speer,Lauren J Wegmeyer,Caitlynn C Sendra,Shannon RowleyThe purpose of the present meta-analysis was to determine if biodata scale scores differ based on demographic group membership (i.e., gender, race, age) and to evaluate the contextual factors that amplify or mitigate these effects (e.g., construct domain, scoring method). Despite the popularity of biodata scales for personnel selection purposes, previous research findings do not provide clear evidence
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A power dependence model of the impact of leader impostorism on supervisor support and undermining: The moderating role of power distance. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2025-01-16
Xueqi Wen,Zihan Liu,Feng Qiu,Keith Leavitt,Xingyu Wang,Ziyang TangLeaders, often perceived as possessing exceptional confidence and competence, are not immune to feelings of self-doubt. Leader impostorism describes the experience that one's attributes, experiences, skills, and abilities fall short of the standards expected in the leadership role, resulting in a sense of deception in fulfilling leadership responsibilities. While existing research has examined the
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Whither bias goes, I will go: An integrative, systematic review of algorithmic bias mitigation. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-12-30
Louis Hickman,Christopher Huynh,Jessica Gass,Brandon Booth,Jason Kuruzovich,Louis TayMachine learning (ML) models are increasingly used for personnel assessment and selection (e.g., resume screeners, automatically scored interviews). However, concerns have been raised throughout society that ML assessments may be biased and perpetuate or exacerbate inequality. Although organizational researchers have begun investigating ML assessments from traditional psychometric and legal perspectives
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Shared leadership and team creativity: Examining effects of shared leadership level and concentration and the countervailing mechanisms. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-12-19
Junfeng Wu,Zhen Zhang,Lynda Jiwen Song,Li ZhuIntegrating insights from team hierarchy literature and shared leadership research, we propose and test a model that illuminates the positive and negative team processes through which shared leadership relates to team creativity. We use a social network lens to examine both shared leadership level (indexed by team density of informal leadership ties) and shared leadership concentration (indexed by
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Dynamic and reciprocal relations between job insecurity and physical and mental health. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-12-16
Cort W Rudolph,Mindy K Shoss,Hannes ZacherThis article reports the results of a 33-wave longitudinal study of relations between job insecurity and physical and mental health based on monthly data collected between April 2020 and December 2022 among n = 1,666 employees in Germany. We integrate dynamic theorizing from the transactional stress model and domain-specific theorizing based on stressor creation and perception to frame hypotheses regarding
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High performers in the shadow: The adverse effect of star employees on their peers. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-12-16
Jinyi Zhou,Ning Li,Shiyong Xu,Wei ChiStar employees are pivotal to organizational success and significantly influence their peers. Previous studies on this topic often explore the attributes of stars and nonstars in isolation. Using social comparison theory, our study posits that as employees' performance approaches that of star employees, nonstar employees become more likely to compare themselves with stars, thereby increasing their
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Trickle-up effects of children's financial anxiety on parent retirement intentions. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-12-12
Alexander Eng,Liuxin Yan,Kai Chi YamToday, adult children depend financially on their parents more than ever before. This poses challenges for the financial well-being of parents, particularly in the context of retirement planning. Our research investigates the crossover of financial anxiety from adult children to their parents and its impact on parents' retirement intentions. Drawing on crossover theory and the resource-based view of
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Precommitment can allow decision makers to maintain trust when de-escalating commitment. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-12-12
Ariella S Kristal,Charles A DorisonFollowing through on commitments builds trust. However, blind adherence to a prior course of action can undermine key organizational objectives. How can this challenge be resolved? Four primary experiments and five supplemental experiments (collective N = 7,759, all preregistered) reveal an effective communication strategy: precommitment (i.e., a public pledge to change course conditional on a concrete
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Prospects for reducing group mean differences on cognitive tests via item selection strategies. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-11-18
Isaac M Bazian,Samuel D Lee,Paul R Sackett,Nathan R Kuncel,Rick R Jacobs,Michael A McDanielCognitive ability tests are widely used in employee selection contexts, but large race and ethnic subgroup mean differences in test scores represent a major drawback to their use. We examine the potential for an item-level procedure to reduce these test score mean differences. In three data sets, differing proportions of cognitive ability test items with higher levels of difficulty or subgroup mean
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Self-promotion in entrepreneurship: A driver for proactive adaptation. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-11-18
Jean-François HarveyResearch in impression management has primarily examined how self-promotion affects one's image, neglecting the potential benefits of feedback on the underlying image that is being impression managed. This study bridges this gap by integrating impression management with social-cognitive theory to explore how self-promotion can enhance feedback from targets, thereby stimulating initiative-taking and
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Jekyll and Hyde leadership: Examining the direct and vicarious experiences of abusive and ethical leadership through a justice variability lens. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Haoying Howie Xu,Sean T Hannah,Zhen Wang,Sherry E Moss,John J Sumanth,Meng SongDrawing on uncertainty management theory and the nascent work on justice variability, we examine employees' direct and vicarious experiences of abusive supervision and ethical leadership. Conceptualizing the simultaneous display of abusive and ethical leadership styles as a form of justice variability, we suggest that a direct supervisor's ethical leadership exacerbates, rather than ameliorates, the
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Liberal versus conservative distrust: A construal-level approach to dissimilarity in the workplace. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Brittany C SolomonThe dramatic rise in political polarization and aggravation of race relations are prominent in the United States. While dissimilarity to others is thought to undermine trust, I challenge the assumption that dissimilarity does so uniformly in the workplace where cross-party and cross-race interactions are structurally induced. Leveraging construal-level theory, I theorize that deep- versus surface-level
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Automated speech recognition bias in personnel selection: The case of automatically scored job interviews. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Louis Hickman,Markus Langer,Rachel M Saef,Louis TayOrganizations, researchers, and software increasingly use automatic speech recognition (ASR) to transcribe speech to text. However, ASR can be less accurate for (i.e., biased against) certain demographic subgroups. This is concerning, given that the machine-learning (ML) models used to automatically score video interviews use ASR transcriptions of interviewee responses as inputs. To address these concerns
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Do human resource systems indeed have "system" effects? The dual internal fit model of a high-performance work system. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-10-07
Saehee Kang,Joo Hun Han,In-Sue Oh,Chad Van Iddekinge,Junting LiThe configurational or "internal fit" perspective proposes that human resource (HR) systems are most effective when individual practices are configured such that they fit together and are mutually reinforcing. The Ability-Motivation-Opportunity (AMO) model has emerged as a predominant way to select and configure HR practices based on whether they attempt to enhance employee ability, motivation, or
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A stimulus-based model of the team adaptation process: An integrated conceptual review. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-10-07
Matthew J Pearsall,Jessica Siegel Christian,Natalie CroitoruAs organizations face constant pressures to respond to changing situations and emergent demands, team members are frequently called upon to change their processes and routines and adapt to new ways of working together. In examining adaptation, most researchers have taken a behavior-driven approach where they collapse across the many types of adaptive demands teams face and rely on traditional input-process-outcome
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Workplace aggression and employee performance: A meta-analytic investigation of mediating mechanisms and cultural contingencies. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-10-03
Rui Zhong,Jingxian Yao,Yating Wang,Zhanna Lyubykh,Sandra L RobinsonWe present a meta-analytic investigation of the theoretical mechanisms underlying why experienced workplace aggression is harmful to the three core performance outcomes (i.e., task performance, citizenship behavior, and deviant behavior). Through a comprehensive literature review of 405 empirical articles, we first extract and identify five prominent theoretical mechanisms: relationship quality, justice
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What happens after anti-Asian racism at work? A moral exclusion perspective on coworker confrontation and mechanisms. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-30
Anjier Chen,Liuxin Yan,Min Young YoonDespite Americans' recent heightened awareness of racial inequality, anti-Asian racism at work remains underrecognized and largely unaddressed. In this research, we aim to understand why White bystander coworkers may fail to confront anti-Asian racism. Integrating the moral exclusion perspective and research on racial positions, we propose that due to perceiving Asian Americans as more foreign than
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Silence on injustices speaks volumes: When and how silence impacts perceptions of managers. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-30
Hannah J Birnbaum,Kaylene J McClanahan,Miguel UnzuetaSpeaking up on social injustices may help create more just and inclusive organizations. Yet, many people choose to remain silent. In this article, we test how managerial silence on injustices can shape impressions of a manager's lack of support for an outgroup. In Study 1, we surveyed employees and found that many noticed their managers' silence and recounted that such silence influenced how they perceived
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Considering personal needs in misdeeds: The role of compassion in shaping observer reactions to leader leniency. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-30
Marie S Mitchell,Shubha Sharma,Kate P Zipay,Robert J Bies,Natalie CroitoruAlthough punishment deters misconduct, protects employees from harm, and maintains cooperation in organizations, not all leaders punish-some are lenient. Employees keenly watch leaders' responses to misconduct. Leniency is often judged as unfair because it violates moral principles of justice, motivating observers to withhold support to leaders. Our research shifts the conversation to explain how moral
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Understanding the impact of witnessed workplace mistreatment: A meta-analysis of observer deontic reactions and employee outcomes. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-26
Zhanna Lyubykh,Rui Zhong,The Ton Vuong,Sandra L Robinson,M Sandy HershcovisThis meta-analysis aims to understand the impact of witnessed workplace mistreatment. Bringing together two streams of research, it examines (a) the boundary conditions of observer reactions that reflect a principled moral disapproval of violations of interpersonal justice (i.e., deontic reactions) and (b) the extent to which witnessed mistreatment explains incremental variance in a range of employee
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Enhancing team crafting through proactive motivation: An intervention study. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-26
Jeroen P de Jong,Inge De Clippeleer,Ans De VosAlthough the literature on individual job crafting has proliferated over the past decade, research on the collaborative crafting efforts of organizational teams has lagged behind, which is surprising given the prominence of team-based arrangements in contemporary work and the importance of team proactivity in today's business environment. Drawing on proactive motivation theory and the literature on
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Does what others can(not) see really matter? The relationship between leadership Arena-Reputation-Identity (LARI) model and leader effectiveness. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-26
Andrew C Loignon,John W Fleenor,Stephen Jeong,David J WoehrLeadership scholars recognize that there is value in capturing how leaders view themselves and how they are viewed by others. Recently, the leadership Arena-Reputation-Identity (LARI) model has been advanced as a means of more precisely capturing the shared and unique perspectives that underlie multisource ratings of leadership. Despite its strengths, several critical questions pertaining to this model
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Out of sight, out of mind: How high-level construals can decrease the ethical framing of risk-mitigating behavior. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-26
Salvatore J Affinito,David A Hofmann,Jonathan E KeeneyOrganizational failures often cause significant harm to employees, the organization itself, and the environment. Investigations of failures consistently highlight how key employees behaved in (perhaps unintentionally) unethical ways that de-prioritized safety, such as investing fewer resources in safety (vs. other priorities) over time. Drawing on these investigations, we suggest a previously underexplored
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Are automated video interviews smart enough? Behavioral modes, reliability, validity, and bias of machine learning cognitive ability assessments. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-26
Louis Hickman,Louis Tay,Sang Eun WooAutomated video interviews (AVIs) that use machine learning (ML) algorithms to assess interviewees are increasingly popular. Extending prior AVI research focusing on noncognitive constructs, the present study critically evaluates the possibility of assessing cognitive ability with AVIs. By developing and examining AVI ML models trained to predict measures of three cognitive ability constructs (i.e
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Seeing value in novelty: Manager and employee social networks as keys in managers' idea evaluation and implementation decisions. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-23
Vijaya Venkataramani,Shuye Lu,Kathryn M Bartol,Xiaoming Zheng,Dan NiEmployees' novel ideas often do not get recognized or valued by their managers, thus precluding these ideas from benefiting the organization. Drawing on the social-cognitive model of creativity evaluation (Zhou & Woodman, 2003) and integrating it with a social network (N/W) lens, this article investigates how characteristics of the social networks of managers and employees play a role in influencing
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Conscientiousness assessments for people with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: Measurement properties and potential issues. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-23
Elisabeth R Silver,Mikki Hebl,Frederick L OswaldOrganizations increasingly recognize the importance of including neurodivergent people (e.g., those with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [ADHD], autism, dyslexia) in the workforce. However, research suggests that some selection tools (e.g., measures of conscientiousness) show lower means for those with ADHD, which may carry implications for personnel selection. The three studies reported here
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Toward whole-person fit assessment: Integrating interests, values, skills, knowledge, and personality using the Occupational Information Network (O*NET). Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-09
Zihan Liu,Kevin A Hoff,Chu Chu,Frederick L Oswald,James RoundsMeasuring person-occupation fit serves many important purposes, from helping young people explore majors and careers to helping jobseekers assess fit with available jobs. However, most existing fit measures are limited in that they focus on single individual difference domains without considering how fit may differ across multiple domains. For example, a jobseeker might be highly interested in a job
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How context shapes collective turnover over time: The relative impact of internal versus external factors. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-09-05
Patrick J Flynn,Matthew L Call,Paul D Bliese,Anthony J NybergDespite the prevalence of research on the consequences of collective turnover (TO), we lack an understanding of how, when, and why changes in the external environment influence collective turnover. The present study extends context emergent turnover and threat-rigidity theories to consider temporal changes in rates of collective turnover brought on by an external disruption. We also conduct variance
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A tale of two narratives: The role of event disruption in employee affective and behavioral reactions to authoritarian leadership. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-08-29
Zheng Zhu,Xingwen Chen,Russell E Johnson,Mengxi Yang,Yiwei Yuan,Yunlu Yin,Jun LiuExtant research demonstrates the destructive nature of authoritarian leadership in the workplace, yet its widespread use suggests that a more balanced view of this leadership style may be needed to identify whether this form of leadership engenders favorable reactions in specific circumstances. Integrating insights from appraisal theory and the compensatory control model, we posit that authoritarian
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Emboldened in the rap "game": How severely stigmatized video models navigate disrespect and vulnerability to workplace mistreatment. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-08-29
Payal N Sharma,Kristie M Rogers,Blake E AshforthMoral stigma attached to an occupation can scar workers through discrediting, shaming, and denying respect. It can also open the door to interpersonal mistreatment, but little is known about how morally stigmatized workers navigate anticipated disrespect to potentially avoid harm. We explore this issue in a study of an occupation carrying severe moral stigma and where disrespect and workplace mistreatment
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Euphemism as a powerful framing device that influences moral judgments and punitive responses after wrongdoing. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-08-29
Matthew L Stanley,Christopher P NeckEuphemism-that is, softening words or phrases substituted for more direct language-has become pervasive in our everyday personal and professional lives. Leveraging theory and research on construal and framing effects, we conceptualize euphemism as a linguistic framing device that influences how observers construe situations and the people, groups, objects, and events within them. We then experimentally
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Navigating inter-team competition: How information broker teams achieve team innovation. Journal of Applied Psychology (IF 9.4) Pub Date : 2024-08-29
Thomas Taiyi Yan,Vijaya Venkataramani,Chaoying Tang,Giles HirstOrganizations are increasingly using teams to stimulate innovation. Often, these teams share knowledge and information with each other to help achieve their goals, while also competing for resources and striving to outperform each other. Importantly, based on their industry, the nature of work, or prior history, some teams may face more competition from peer teams than others. Our research examines