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How Knowledge-Hiding Behavior Among Manufacturing Professionals Influences Functional Interdependence and Turnover Intention.
Front Psychol. 2021; 12:723938.FP

Abstract

Objectives: Knowledge hiding is inappropriate behavior of employees at the workplace that makes the entire organization suffer a subtle yet significant loss. Lack of sharing makes the journey of learning an arduous process. This, in turn, gives rise to a series of uncivil behaviors, hence resulting in a decrease of functional interdependence (FI). The cascading result toll is a turnover intention (TI), resting only after turnover-an actual separation from the employer. Statistical analysis of the empirical data collected depicts the intensity of influence of FI and TI as a result of the knowledge-hiding behavior. Methods: Three hundred sixty-three executives employed in three public and two private manufacturing organizations in eastern India were the respondents in our study. To analyze the difference in variables of the study, a t-test was carried out. The statistical findings suggest no significant difference among study variables. This specifies that, despite a considerable difference in levels of management, there was no significant difference in perceiving workplace incivility, knowledge-hiding behavior, FI, and TI items of our instruments. Results: Correlation findings show a negative association between workplace incivility and functional interdependence (r = -0.37 when the value of p is <0.01) and a positive association among workplace incivility and turnover intention (r = 0.32 when the value of p is <0.01). The condensed effect of workplace incivility (β = -0.59 when the value of p is <0.001) along with an important presence of knowledge-hiding behavior (β = -0.68 when the value of p is <0.01) when the dependent variable is FI indicates that knowledge-hiding behavior is mediating a partial association among workplace incivility and FI. Similarly, the effect of workplace incivility (β = 0.43 when the value of p is <0.01) is decreased when the impact of knowledge-hiding behavior (β = 0.66 when the value of p is <0.001) was sizeable with TI being the dependent variable. Conclusion: The effect of knowledge hiding is inversely proportional to FI, whereas sharing has a direct relation with TI. An exhaustive data sample and a rigorous statistical analysis may give a clear picture of the amount of impact of TI and FI due to the lack of knowledge sharing and/or knowledge hiding.

Authors+Show Affiliations

School of Human Resource Management, XIM University, Bhubaneswar, India.School of Human Resource Management, XIM University, Bhubaneswar, India.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

34646210

Citation

Jena, Lalatendu Kesari, and Deepika Swain. "How Knowledge-Hiding Behavior Among Manufacturing Professionals Influences Functional Interdependence and Turnover Intention." Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 12, 2021, p. 723938.
Jena LK, Swain D. How Knowledge-Hiding Behavior Among Manufacturing Professionals Influences Functional Interdependence and Turnover Intention. Front Psychol. 2021;12:723938.
Jena, L. K., & Swain, D. (2021). How Knowledge-Hiding Behavior Among Manufacturing Professionals Influences Functional Interdependence and Turnover Intention. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 723938. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.723938
Jena LK, Swain D. How Knowledge-Hiding Behavior Among Manufacturing Professionals Influences Functional Interdependence and Turnover Intention. Front Psychol. 2021;12:723938. PubMed PMID: 34646210.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - How Knowledge-Hiding Behavior Among Manufacturing Professionals Influences Functional Interdependence and Turnover Intention. AU - Jena,Lalatendu Kesari, AU - Swain,Deepika, Y1 - 2021/09/27/ PY - 2021/06/11/received PY - 2021/08/09/accepted PY - 2021/10/14/entrez PY - 2021/10/15/pubmed PY - 2021/10/15/medline KW - behavioral vulnerabilities KW - collaboration KW - human capital KW - interpersonal equation KW - knowledge hiding SP - 723938 EP - 723938 JF - Frontiers in psychology JO - Front Psychol VL - 12 N2 - Objectives: Knowledge hiding is inappropriate behavior of employees at the workplace that makes the entire organization suffer a subtle yet significant loss. Lack of sharing makes the journey of learning an arduous process. This, in turn, gives rise to a series of uncivil behaviors, hence resulting in a decrease of functional interdependence (FI). The cascading result toll is a turnover intention (TI), resting only after turnover-an actual separation from the employer. Statistical analysis of the empirical data collected depicts the intensity of influence of FI and TI as a result of the knowledge-hiding behavior. Methods: Three hundred sixty-three executives employed in three public and two private manufacturing organizations in eastern India were the respondents in our study. To analyze the difference in variables of the study, a t-test was carried out. The statistical findings suggest no significant difference among study variables. This specifies that, despite a considerable difference in levels of management, there was no significant difference in perceiving workplace incivility, knowledge-hiding behavior, FI, and TI items of our instruments. Results: Correlation findings show a negative association between workplace incivility and functional interdependence (r = -0.37 when the value of p is <0.01) and a positive association among workplace incivility and turnover intention (r = 0.32 when the value of p is <0.01). The condensed effect of workplace incivility (β = -0.59 when the value of p is <0.001) along with an important presence of knowledge-hiding behavior (β = -0.68 when the value of p is <0.01) when the dependent variable is FI indicates that knowledge-hiding behavior is mediating a partial association among workplace incivility and FI. Similarly, the effect of workplace incivility (β = 0.43 when the value of p is <0.01) is decreased when the impact of knowledge-hiding behavior (β = 0.66 when the value of p is <0.001) was sizeable with TI being the dependent variable. Conclusion: The effect of knowledge hiding is inversely proportional to FI, whereas sharing has a direct relation with TI. An exhaustive data sample and a rigorous statistical analysis may give a clear picture of the amount of impact of TI and FI due to the lack of knowledge sharing and/or knowledge hiding. SN - 1664-1078 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/34646210/How_Knowledge_Hiding_Behavior_Among_Manufacturing_Professionals_Influences_Functional_Interdependence_and_Turnover_Intention_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -
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