EMOTIONAL LABOR DYNAMICS: A MOMENTARY APPROACH

被引:129
作者
Gabriel, Allison S. [1 ]
Diefendorff, James M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Arizona, Dept Management & Org, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
[2] Univ Akron, Dept Psychol, Akron, OH 44325 USA
关键词
AFFECTIVE DELIVERY; WORK; SERVICE; MULTILEVEL; DISPLAY; MODEL; ORGANIZATIONS; CONSEQUENCES; ANTECEDENTS; PERCEPTIONS;
D O I
10.5465/amj.2013.1135
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Emotional labor has been described as a dynamic self-regulatory process that unfolds over the course of customer interactions, with employees continuously monitoring and adjusting their felt and expressed emotions via two emotion regulation strategies: surface acting and deep acting. Despite dynamic theory on the topic, empirical tests have largely ignored within-episode variability in emotional labor, relying on assessments of emotional labor focused on the person, day, or interaction level of analysis. The current study elaborated on theory pertaining to within-episode emotional labor dynamics, utilizing a call center simulation to examine how shifts in customer incivility impacted on continuous measures (captured every 200 milliseconds) of participants' felt emotions, surface acting, deep acting, and vocal tone during a single interaction. Results provided evidence that customer behavior causally influences within-episode changes in emotions, emotion regulation, and vocal tone, and that these key emotional labor variables significantly relate to each other at the momentary level of analysis. Further, by modeling lagged effects, we were able to gain insight into the causal direction in the relationships among these continuously measured variables. Moreover, we showed for the first time that surface acting and deep acting are used simultaneously to manage emotional labor demands.
引用
收藏
页码:1804 / 1825
页数:22
相关论文
共 74 条
[31]   When "the show must go on": Surface acting and deep acting as determinants of emotional exhaustion and peer-rated service delivery [J].
Grandey, AA .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2003, 46 (01) :86-96
[32]   INVESTIGATING CAUSAL RELATIONS BY ECONOMETRIC MODELS AND CROSS-SPECTRAL METHODS [J].
GRANGER, CWJ .
ECONOMETRICA, 1969, 37 (03) :424-438
[33]  
Gross J. J., 1998, Review of General Psychology, V2, P271, DOI DOI 10.1037/1089-2680.2.3.271
[34]   From bad to worse: Negative exchange spirals in employee-customer service interactions [J].
Groth, Markus ;
Grandey, Alicia .
ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2012, 2 (03) :208-233
[35]  
Heaphy ED, 2008, ACAD MANAGE REV, V33, P137
[36]   Are all smiles created equal? How emotional contagion and emotional labor affect service relationships [J].
Hennig-Thurau, Thorsten ;
Groth, Markus ;
Paul, Michael ;
Gremler, Dwayne D. .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING, 2006, 70 (03) :58-73
[37]  
Hochschild AR, 2012, MANAGED HEART: COMMERCIALIZATION OF HUMAN FEELING, P1
[38]   On the Costs and Benefits of Emotional Labor: A Meta-Analysis of Three Decades of Research [J].
Hulsheger, Ute R. ;
Schewe, Anna F. .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 16 (03) :361-389
[39]   Emotional Labor, Strain, and Performance: Testing Reciprocal Relationships in a Longitudinal Panel Study [J].
Hulsheger, Ute R. ;
Lang, Jonas W. B. ;
Maier, Guenter W. .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 15 (04) :505-521
[40]   IS EMOTIONAL LABOR MORE DIFFICULT FOR SOME THAN FOR OTHERS? A MULTILEVEL, EXPERIENCE-SAMPLING STUDY [J].
Judge, Timothy A. ;
Woolf, Erin Fluegge ;
Hurst, Charlice .
PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 62 (01) :57-88