To alleviate group members' physiological stress, supervisors need to be more than polite and professional

被引:0
|
作者
Begeny, Christopher T. [1 ]
Huo, Yuen J. [2 ]
Smith, Heather J. [3 ]
Rodriguez, Blanca Sarai [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Exeter, Exeter, Devon, England
[2] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA
[3] Sonoma State Univ, Rohnert Pk, CA 94928 USA
关键词
cortisol; group processes; justice; respect; social identity; stress; PROCEDURAL JUSTICE; CORTISOL RESPONSES; SOCIAL IDENTITY; BUFFERS NEUROENDOCRINE; SUBJECTIVE RESPONSES; RESPECT; MODEL; FAIR; RUMINATION; SUPPORT;
D O I
10.1177/13684302221091065
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Although stressors are common in group life, people cope better when group authorities treat them with care/concern. However, it remains unclear whether such treatment affects individuals' physiological stress. In this experiment, individuals engaged in an interview known to increase cortisol (stress biomarker). Surrounding the interview, an ingroup supervisor treated them with standard professionalism (politeness [control]), explicit care/concern (high-quality treatment), or disregard (poor-quality treatment). While those in the control condition experienced a spike in cortisol, individuals in the high-quality treatment condition did not experience this physiological stress (cortisol). Those given poor-quality treatment also did not exhibit stress, suggesting the explicit disregard for them may have undermined the interview's legitimacy, thereby removing social evaluative threat. Paralleling past research, self-reported stress did not reflect individuals' physiological stress (cortisol). Overall, results suggest that to alleviate group members' physiological stress, supervisors need to be more than polite and professional-also demonstrating care/concern for them as individuals.
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页码:1140 / 1160
页数:21
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