Authors
Anne Burmeister, Fabiola Heike Gerpott, Ulrike Fasbender
Publication date
2018/7/2
Journal
Academy of Management Proceedings
Volume
2018
Issue
1
Pages
11763
Publisher
Academy of Management
Description
Knowledge hiding can have negative consequences, but the mechanisms through which knowledge hiding affects outcomes are still under-theorized. This study proposes that hiding knowledge evokes feelings of guilt and shame in knowledge hiding perpetrators, which in turn trigger an emotion-based reparatory mechanism with differential effects on their subsequent compensatory work behavior (i.e., organizational citizenship behavior). Specifically, drawing from theorizing in the moral emotions literature, we argue that guilt induces the motivation to correct one’s transgressions, whereas shame induces the tendency to withdraw after hiding knowledge. Taken together, we propose that knowledge hiding has a positive indirect effect on organizational citizenship behavior through guilt, but a negative indirect effect through shame. Two studies–a scenario-based experiment with 137 U.S. American employees and a …
Total citations
2021202211
Scholar articles
A Burmeister, FH Gerpott, U Fasbender - Academy of Management Proceedings, 2018