Does Leader-Affective Presence Influence Communication of Creative Ideas Within Work Teams?

被引:14
作者
Madrid, Hector P. [1 ]
Totterdell, Peter [2 ]
Niven, Karen [3 ]
机构
[1] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Sch Management, Ave Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Santiago 7820436, Chile
[2] Univ Sheffield, Dept Psychol, Sheffield S10 2TN, S Yorkshire, England
[3] Univ Manchester, Manchester Business Sch, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
关键词
affective presence; silence behavior; creativity; teamwork; leadership; INTERRATER AGREEMENT; METHOD VARIANCE; ACTIVATION; BEHAVIOR; DEMANDS; SILENCE; VOICE; MODEL; MOOD;
D O I
10.1037/emo0000183
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Affective presence is a novel, emotion-related personality trait, supported in experimental studies, concerning the extent to which a person makes his or her interaction partners feel the same way (Eisenkraft & Elfenbein, 2010). Applying this concept to an applied teamwork context, we proposed that team-leader-affective presence would influence team members' communication of creative ideas. Multilevel modeling analysis of data from a survey study conducted with teams from a consultancy firm confirmed that team-leader-affective presence interacted with team-member creative idea generation to predict inhibition of voicing their ideas. Specifically, withholding of ideas was less likely when team members generated creative ideas and their team leader had higher positive affective presence or lower negative affective presence. These findings contribute to emotion research by showing affective presence as a trait with interpersonal meaning, which can shape how cognition is translated into social behavior in applied performance contexts, such as teamwork in organizations.
引用
收藏
页码:798 / 802
页数:5
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   Shopfloor innovation: Facilitating the suggestion and implementation of ideas [J].
Axtell, CM ;
Holman, DJ ;
Unsworth, KL ;
Wall, TD ;
Waterson, PE .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 73 :265-285
[2]   Why Do You Make Us Feel Good? Correlates and Interpersonal Consequences of Affective Presence in Speed-dating [J].
Berrios, Raul ;
Totterdell, Peter ;
Niven, Karen .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY, 2015, 29 (01) :72-82
[3]   Estimating interrater agreement with the average deviation index: A user's guide [J].
Burke, MJ ;
Dunlap, WP .
ORGANIZATIONAL RESEARCH METHODS, 2002, 5 (02) :159-172
[4]   IMPLICIT VOICE THEORIES: TAKEN-FOR-GRANTED RULES OF SELF-CENSORSHIP AT WORK [J].
Detert, James R. ;
Edmondson, Amy C. .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2011, 54 (03) :461-488
[5]   Psychological safety and learning behavior in work teams [J].
Edmondson, A .
ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY, 1999, 44 (02) :350-383
[6]   The Way You Make Me Feel: Evidence for Individual Differences in Affective Presence [J].
Eisenkraft, Noah ;
Elfenbein, Hillary Anger .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2010, 21 (04) :505-510
[7]   The many faces of emotional contagion: An affective process theory of affective linkage [J].
Elfenbein, Hillary Anger .
ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2014, 4 (04) :326-362
[8]  
Elliot AJ, 2008, HANDBOOK OF APPROACH AND AVOIDANCE MOTIVATION, P1
[9]   MOOD AND JUDGMENT - THE AFFECT INFUSION MODEL (AIM) [J].
FORGAS, JP .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1995, 117 (01) :39-66
[10]   Feeling and speaking: Mood effects on verbal communication strategies [J].
Forges, JP .
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 1999, 25 (07) :850-863