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Investigating a process model for leader affective presence,interpersonal emotion regulation,and interpersonal behaviour in teams
Authors:Hector P Madrid  Peter Totterdell  Karen Niven  Cristian A Vasquez
Institution:1. School of Management,Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile;2. Department of Psychology,University of Sheffield, UK;3. Manchester Business School,Manchester University, UK
Abstract:Leader affective presence is the tendency of leaders to elicit feelings that are consistent among other individuals, and has been supported as a relevant personality trait for understanding teamwork. Drawing on a model that integrates personality and emotion regulation, this study aimed to expand research on affective presence by proposing team members’ perceptions of leader interpersonal emotion regulation as a process that explains how leader affective presence is related to team member behaviour. In the model, teamness—the perception that interdependence and reflexivity are required in the team—is presented as a boundary condition to the effects of affective presence via emotion regulation. Results of a study conducted with 99 teams showed that team member ratings of leader positive affective presence were linked to their perceptions that leaders had used affect-improving emotion regulation which in turn was associated with greater team citizenship behaviour. Contrariwise, team member ratings of leader negative affective presence were associated with perceived use of affect-worsening emotion regulation by leaders which in turn was associated with lower levels of team citizenship, but only when teams were low in teamness. These findings contribute to understanding how leaders’ individual differences are related to teamwork through affective processes.
Keywords:Affective presence  emotion regulation  citizenship behaviour  leaders  teams
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