To unpack the relationship between employees' work-induced sleep deprivation and their organizational citizenship behavior, this study details a mediating role of their propensities to dehumanize their organizational leaders, as well as a moderating role of perceived job formalization. Survey data collected from employees who work in the oil distribution sector show that a critical reason that persistent sleep problems, caused by work, reduce the likelihood that they engage in voluntary work efforts is that they treat organizational leaders as impersonal objects. Perceptions of the presence of job formalization or red tape invigorate this detrimental effect. For organizational practitioners, this study accordingly reveals a notable danger f...
How does sleep affect employee effectiveness and what can employees do to remain effective on days w...
Many occupational factors may interfere with sleep. Sleep disturbances can, in turn, endanger the he...
Job embeddedness is predominately assumed to benefit employees, work groups, and organizations (e.g....
Purpose: This study investigates how employees' experience of suffering from insomnia might reduce t...
Sleep deprivation is an epidemic problem in our society that adversely affects the quality and safet...
The causes of workplace deviance are of increasing interest to organizations. We integrate psycholog...
This study examines the role of negative work rumination and recovery experiences in explaining the ...
This is a two-part paper that discusses sleep deprivation. The first part documents the extent of th...
Extant research suggests that workplace ostracism has a detrimental impact on the outcomes of employ...
The interaction between sleep and work-related behaviors influence many aspects of employee performa...
This article proposes and tests a model that highlights how organisational embeddedness relates to i...
We examine the daily sleep of leaders as an antecedent to daily abusive supervisory behavior and wor...
Recent studies have shown that workplace victimization is negatively related to work engagement. The...
Although research has documented the relationship between sleep and workplace outcomes among general...
Organizations are increasingly devoting interest towards understanding the causes of workplace devia...
How does sleep affect employee effectiveness and what can employees do to remain effective on days w...
Many occupational factors may interfere with sleep. Sleep disturbances can, in turn, endanger the he...
Job embeddedness is predominately assumed to benefit employees, work groups, and organizations (e.g....
Purpose: This study investigates how employees' experience of suffering from insomnia might reduce t...
Sleep deprivation is an epidemic problem in our society that adversely affects the quality and safet...
The causes of workplace deviance are of increasing interest to organizations. We integrate psycholog...
This study examines the role of negative work rumination and recovery experiences in explaining the ...
This is a two-part paper that discusses sleep deprivation. The first part documents the extent of th...
Extant research suggests that workplace ostracism has a detrimental impact on the outcomes of employ...
The interaction between sleep and work-related behaviors influence many aspects of employee performa...
This article proposes and tests a model that highlights how organisational embeddedness relates to i...
We examine the daily sleep of leaders as an antecedent to daily abusive supervisory behavior and wor...
Recent studies have shown that workplace victimization is negatively related to work engagement. The...
Although research has documented the relationship between sleep and workplace outcomes among general...
Organizations are increasingly devoting interest towards understanding the causes of workplace devia...
How does sleep affect employee effectiveness and what can employees do to remain effective on days w...
Many occupational factors may interfere with sleep. Sleep disturbances can, in turn, endanger the he...
Job embeddedness is predominately assumed to benefit employees, work groups, and organizations (e.g....