We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance

This research aimed to enhance understanding of how relationships among trait affect and individual performance are influenced by group affective properties. To do this, we integrated trait affect and affective diversity theories within a self-regulatory framework to generate predictions regarding t...

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Main Authors: Yeo, G., Andrei, Daniela, Hall, S.E., Tang, R.L., Restubog, S.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75903
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author Yeo, G.
Andrei, Daniela
Hall, S.E.
Tang, R.L.
Restubog, S.
author_facet Yeo, G.
Andrei, Daniela
Hall, S.E.
Tang, R.L.
Restubog, S.
author_sort Yeo, G.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This research aimed to enhance understanding of how relationships among trait affect and individual performance are influenced by group affective properties. To do this, we integrated trait affect and affective diversity theories within a self-regulatory framework to generate predictions regarding the moderating effect of group trait affect and group affective diversity on the relationship between trait affect and individual performance. Hypotheses were tested in groups working for 6-months on industry-relevant thesis projects. Trait affect was collected on Day 1 of the course. Group trait affect was operationalized as mean level of trait affect within each group. Group affective diversity was operationalized as the standard deviation of trait affect within each group. Individual performance was measured via peer-ratings of work-role proficiency and supervisor-rated thesis grades. The detrimental effect of trait negative affect on individual performance was buffered for individuals who were working with affectively similar peers – groups characterized by high group trait negative affect and low group negative affective diversity. Further, the beneficial effect of group trait positive affect on individual performance was strengthened when group positive affective diversity was low. Our findings highlight the importance of considering multiple affective properties at both individual and group levels in order to understand affective influences on individual performance.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:05:43Z
publishDate 2019
publisher Elsevier
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-759032019-07-05T07:15:24Z We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance Yeo, G. Andrei, Daniela Hall, S.E. Tang, R.L. Restubog, S. This research aimed to enhance understanding of how relationships among trait affect and individual performance are influenced by group affective properties. To do this, we integrated trait affect and affective diversity theories within a self-regulatory framework to generate predictions regarding the moderating effect of group trait affect and group affective diversity on the relationship between trait affect and individual performance. Hypotheses were tested in groups working for 6-months on industry-relevant thesis projects. Trait affect was collected on Day 1 of the course. Group trait affect was operationalized as mean level of trait affect within each group. Group affective diversity was operationalized as the standard deviation of trait affect within each group. Individual performance was measured via peer-ratings of work-role proficiency and supervisor-rated thesis grades. The detrimental effect of trait negative affect on individual performance was buffered for individuals who were working with affectively similar peers – groups characterized by high group trait negative affect and low group negative affective diversity. Further, the beneficial effect of group trait positive affect on individual performance was strengthened when group positive affective diversity was low. Our findings highlight the importance of considering multiple affective properties at both individual and group levels in order to understand affective influences on individual performance. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75903 10.1016/j.jvb.2019.04.007 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Yeo, G.
Andrei, Daniela
Hall, S.E.
Tang, R.L.
Restubog, S.
We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
title We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
title_full We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
title_fullStr We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
title_full_unstemmed We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
title_short We do not exist in an affective vacuum! Cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
title_sort we do not exist in an affective vacuum! cross-level effects of trait affect and group affective properties on individual performance
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75903