political affiliation;
political affiliation similarity;
cybervetting;
social media;
SOCIAL IDENTITY THEORY;
RELATIONAL DEMOGRAPHY;
SEX SIMILARITY;
ABUSIVE SUPERVISION;
INTERVIEW RATINGS;
EXPANDED MODEL;
DIVERSITY;
IDEOLOGY;
RACE;
PERSONALITY;
D O I:
10.1037/apl0000422
中图分类号:
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号:
040203 ;
摘要:
Recent research in political science, along with theory in applied psychology, has suggested that political affiliation may be associated with substantial levels of affect and, thus, might influence employment decision-makers. We designed 2 experiments using social media screening tasks to examine the effects of political affiliation similarity on ratings of hireability. Our findings in both studies suggest that the identification (capturing positive affect) and disidentification (capturing negative affect) of a decision-maker with a job applicant's political affiliation were important variables that influenced perceived similarity. Consistent with the similarity-attraction paradigm, perceived similarity was related to liking and, in turn, liking was related to expected levels of applicant task and organizational citizenship behavior performance. Further, in both studies, political affiliation related variables influenced hireability decisions over and above job-relevant individuating information. Future research should continue to examine political affiliation similarity, particularly in light of its frequent availability to decision-makers (e.g., via social media websites).
引用
收藏
页码:472 / 486
页数:15
相关论文
共 83 条
[41]
Kluemper DH., 2015, Employee recruitment, selection, and assessment: Contemporary issues for theory and practice