Daily effects of face-to-face and cyber incivility via sadness, anger and fear

Karen Niven, Catherine Connolly, Christopher B. Stride, Samuel Farley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Many workers are subjected to incidents of rudeness and ignorance at work. Emerging evidence suggests that exposure to such incivility has an immediate impact on people’s well-being and commitment. In this article we contribute to this nascent area of enquiry by investigating the role of discrete emotions in explaining how exposure to incivility translates into detrimental daily consequences, and by examining whether the role of emotions varies depending on whether incivilities occur during face-to-face versus online interactions. In a diary study of 69 workers, we find that face-to-face incivility has a pronounced daily impact on workers’ exhaustion and turnover intention, and that this impact is mediated by increased feelings of sadness and anger, but not fear. In contrast, cyber incivility only affects workers’ emotional exhaustion as a result of increases in sadness. Our findings provide insight into the mechanisms of daily effects of workplace incivility and the divergent daily effects of face-to-face versus cyber incivility.
Original languageEnglish
JournalWork and Stress
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Sept 2021

Keywords

  • Incivility
  • anger
  • cyber incivility
  • discrete emotions
  • fear
  • sadness

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