4.4 Article

Linking Perceptions of Role Stress and Incivility to Workplace Aggression: The Moderating Role of Personality

Journal

JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 3, Pages 316-329

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0028211

Keywords

aggression; workplace incivility; role stress; personality

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Although research on workplace aggression has long recognized job stressors as antecedents, little is known about the process through which employee responses to stressful workplace demands escalate from relatively mild interactions into more intense behaviors. This study investigates the influence that employees' perceptions of role stress (ambiguity, conflict, overload) have on their aggressive behavior by affecting their perceptions of incivility, and whether these downstream effects depend on personality traits (neuroticism, agreeableness, conscientiousness). Results supported moderated mediation, such that the indirect effects of perceived role ambiguity and role conflict on enacted aggression through experienced incivility varied according to individual differences in personality.

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