Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Moving beyond assumptions of deviance: The reconceptualization and measurement of workplace gossip.
J Appl Psychol. 2017 Jan; 102(1):1-25.JA

Abstract

Despite decades of research from other academic fields arguing that gossip is an important and potentially functional behavior, organizational research has largely assumed that gossip is malicious talk. This has resulted in the proliferation of gossip items in deviance scales, effectively subsuming workplace gossip research into deviance research. In this paper, the authors argue that organizational research has traditionally considered only a very narrow subset of workplace gossip, focusing almost exclusively on extreme negative cases which are not reflective of typical workplace gossip behavior. Instead of being primarily malicious, typical workplace gossip can be either positive or negative in nature and may serve important functions. It is therefore recommended that workplace gossip be studied on its own, independent of deviance. To facilitate this, the authors reconceptualize the workplace gossip construct and then develop a series of general-purpose English- and Chinese-language workplace gossip scales. Using 8 samples (including qualitative, multisource, multiwave, and multicultural data), the authors demonstrate the construct validity, reliability, cross-cultural measurement invariance, and acceptable psychometric properties of the workplace gossip scales. Relationships are demonstrated between workplace gossip and a variety of other organizational variables and processes, including uncertainty, emotion validation, self-esteem, norm enforcement, networking, influence, organizational justice, performance, deviance, and turnover. Future directions in workplace gossip research are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Psychology.Department of Psychology.Department of Psychology.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27732002

Citation

Brady, Daniel L., et al. "Moving Beyond Assumptions of Deviance: the Reconceptualization and Measurement of Workplace Gossip." The Journal of Applied Psychology, vol. 102, no. 1, 2017, pp. 1-25.
Brady DL, Brown DJ, Liang LH. Moving beyond assumptions of deviance: The reconceptualization and measurement of workplace gossip. J Appl Psychol. 2017;102(1):1-25.
Brady, D. L., Brown, D. J., & Liang, L. H. (2017). Moving beyond assumptions of deviance: The reconceptualization and measurement of workplace gossip. The Journal of Applied Psychology, 102(1), 1-25. https://doi.org/10.1037/apl0000164
Brady DL, Brown DJ, Liang LH. Moving Beyond Assumptions of Deviance: the Reconceptualization and Measurement of Workplace Gossip. J Appl Psychol. 2017;102(1):1-25. PubMed PMID: 27732002.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Moving beyond assumptions of deviance: The reconceptualization and measurement of workplace gossip. AU - Brady,Daniel L, AU - Brown,Douglas J, AU - Liang,Lindie Hanyu, Y1 - 2016/10/10/ PY - 2016/10/28/pubmed PY - 2017/5/11/medline PY - 2016/10/13/entrez SP - 1 EP - 25 JF - The Journal of applied psychology JO - J Appl Psychol VL - 102 IS - 1 N2 - Despite decades of research from other academic fields arguing that gossip is an important and potentially functional behavior, organizational research has largely assumed that gossip is malicious talk. This has resulted in the proliferation of gossip items in deviance scales, effectively subsuming workplace gossip research into deviance research. In this paper, the authors argue that organizational research has traditionally considered only a very narrow subset of workplace gossip, focusing almost exclusively on extreme negative cases which are not reflective of typical workplace gossip behavior. Instead of being primarily malicious, typical workplace gossip can be either positive or negative in nature and may serve important functions. It is therefore recommended that workplace gossip be studied on its own, independent of deviance. To facilitate this, the authors reconceptualize the workplace gossip construct and then develop a series of general-purpose English- and Chinese-language workplace gossip scales. Using 8 samples (including qualitative, multisource, multiwave, and multicultural data), the authors demonstrate the construct validity, reliability, cross-cultural measurement invariance, and acceptable psychometric properties of the workplace gossip scales. Relationships are demonstrated between workplace gossip and a variety of other organizational variables and processes, including uncertainty, emotion validation, self-esteem, norm enforcement, networking, influence, organizational justice, performance, deviance, and turnover. Future directions in workplace gossip research are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record SN - 1939-1854 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27732002/Moving_beyond_assumptions_of_deviance:_The_reconceptualization_and_measurement_of_workplace_gossip_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -