ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2024, Vol. 56 ›› Issue (11): 1556-1567.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2024.01556

• 研究报告 • 上一篇    下一篇

领导者如何通过学习机会评估减少由下属宣泄引起的领导日常辱虐行为?

刘德鹏1, 庞旭宏2, 宋杰2, 李珏兴3, 杨椅伊4, 张生军2   

  1. 1山东大学管理学院, 济南 250100;
    2上海财经大学商学院, 上海 200433;
    3云南师范大学经济与管理学院, 昆明 650500;
    4重庆工商大学工商管理学院, 重庆 400067
  • 收稿日期:2023-11-30 发布日期:2024-09-05 出版日期:2024-11-25
  • 通讯作者: 庞旭宏, E-amil: 15954649589@163.com
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金青年项目(71902100)和重庆工商大学高层次人才科研启动项目(2355048)资助

Reducing daily abusive supervision caused by subordinates’ venting through learning opportunity appraisal: A study from leaders’ perspective

LIU Depeng1, PANG Xuhong2, SONG Jie2, LI Juexing3, YANG Yiyi4, ZHANG Shengjun2   

  1. 1School of Management, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, China;
    2School of Business, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, Shanghai 200433, China;
    3School of Economics and Management, Yunnan Normal University, Kunming 650500, China;
    4School of Business Administration, Chongqing Technology and Business University, Chongqing 400067, China
  • Received:2023-11-30 Online:2024-09-05 Published:2024-11-25

摘要: 现有文献主要从“宣泄者”视角出发, 讨论宣泄如何影响了宣泄者的态度和行为, 从“接受者”视角探索宣泄对接受者的影响的文献相对匮乏。仅有的“接受者”视角文章将领导者看作是被动的接受者, 指出下属对领导者宣泄会引起领导者的负面情绪, 进而导致领导者对下属做出负面行为。同时, 文章还指出组织需要选择具有合适的个人特质的领导者来应对下属宣泄带来的挑战。不同于以往研究, 本文将领导者看作是具有主观能动性的接受者, 基于压力交互理论, 提出在个体内层次, 自我耗竭这一认知机制在领导者接受到下属宣泄和实施领导日常辱虐行为之间起中介作用。同时, 领导者自己能够通过下属宣泄学习机会评估来缓解下属宣泄导致领导者自我耗竭效应, 进而减少领导日常辱虐行为。本文采用经验取样法, 在一家大型制造业企业和一家金融服务企业收集了连续10个工作日、每天3次调研的数据, 来自188位中基层领导者的1532个观测点的匹配数据支持了上述假设。

关键词: 职场宣泄行为, 自我耗竭, 领导日常辱虐行为, 下属宣泄学习机会评估

Abstract: Venting at work is a common issue and management dilemma that leaders, at whom it is often targeted, confront daily. Studies have revealed that venting is a double-edged sword. Furthermore, existing research tends to focus on the ventor’s perspective, largely ignoring the ventee. To our knowledge, only one empirical study has looked at the issue from the ventee’s perspective, revealing negative emotions and destructive leadership behaviors as consequences of subordinates’ venting. Nevertheless, recent studies argue that receivers respond to intricate workplace messages both through “hot,” emotional responses and through “cold, ” cognitive reactions, and the latter might be more explanatory. Unfortunately, research on subordinates’ venting has largely ignored the cognitive processes, suggesting instead that the solution may lie in recruiting leaders with certain characteristics. However, not only is the strategy extremely expensive, but it also presents leaders with navigational challenges. Therefore, based on the transactional theory of stress, this paper explored how leaders’ behaviors are affected by subordinates’ venting. By conceptualizing subordinates’ venting as a stressor for leaders, we proposed that the impact of subordinates’ venting on leaders’ ego depletion and subsequent abusive supervision may be alleviated if leaders can reframe such venting as a learning opportunity rather than a threat.
To capture within-person variability and test our model, we collected data using a time-lagged interval-based experience sampling method. The study participants included middle managers from an electronics manufacturing firm and a financial services company in eastern China. The survey was conducted in two stages. First, 196 managers completed a baseline survey of demographic data and managerial self-efficacy. Afterward, the participants completed three surveys per day over ten consecutive working days. Time 1 was a measure of daily receipt of subordinates’ venting and negative affect. Time 2 included appraisal of the learning opportunity provided by daily subordinates’ venting, appraisal of threat perceived in daily subordinates’ venting, and appraisal of daily ego depletion. Time 3 measured daily abusive supervision. After data matching, the final sample comprised 1, 532 observations from 188 middle managers.
Multilevel path analyses showed that, at the within-person level, daily receipt of subordinates’ venting was positively related to leaders’ daily ego depletion, and that leaders’ daily ego depletion mediated the relationship between daily receipt of subordinates’ venting and daily abusive supervision. Moreover, learning opportunity appraisal weakened the positive relationship between daily receipt of subordinates’ venting and daily ego depletion, as a result of which this relationship was significant only when leaders’ learning opportunity appraisal was low. Further, learning opportunity appraisal moderated the indirect relationship between daily receipt of subordinates’ venting and daily abusive supervision through daily ego depletion.
There are three key respects in which the present study significantly advances the ventee’s perspective within the relevant literature. First, instead of treating leaders as passive recipients of venting, this paper applies the transactional theory of stress to argue for leaders’ active role in managing subordinates’ venting, particularly by employing learning opportunity appraisal. Second, it stresses the role of “cold” cognitive mechanisms over “hot” emotional mechanisms, delineating the mediating role of ego depletion as a key cognitive process underlying leaders’ negative reactions. Third, as opposed to suggestions of recruiting leaders with specific personal characteristics to combat the negative consequences of workplace venting, this paper shows that the strategy of learning opportunity appraisal is a cost-effective and practical approach for leaders to implement. This study also enriches the general understanding of situational antecedents of abusive supervision. Thus, this paper offers practical ways to effectively address subordinates’ venting and minimize the potential abusive supervision arising from unfavorable situations.

Key words: venting at work, ego-depletion, abusive supervision, learning opportunity appraisal

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