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Dive into the research topics where Andrew P. Knight is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew P. Knight.


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2015

Positive Is Usually Good, Negative Is Not Always Bad: The Effects of Group Affect on Social Integration and Task Performance

Andrew P. Knight; Noah Eisenkraft

Grounded in a social functional perspective, this article examines the conditions under which group affect influences group functioning. Using meta-analysis, the authors leverage heterogeneity across 39 independent studies of 2,799 groups to understand how contextual factors-group affect source (exogenous or endogenous to the group) and group life span (one-shot or ongoing)-moderate the influence of shared feelings on social integration and task performance. As predicted, results indicate that group positive affect has consistent positive effects on social integration and task performance regardless of contextual idiosyncrasies. The effects of group negative affect, on the other hand, are context-dependent. Shared negative feelings promote social integration and task performance when stemming from an exogenous source or experienced in a 1-shot group, but undermine social integration and task performance when stemming from an endogenous source or experienced in an ongoing group. The authors discuss implications of their findings and highlight directions for future theory and research on group affect.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2014

Shared Attention Increases Mood Infusion

Garriy Shteynberg; Jacob B. Hirsh; Adam D. Galinsky; Andrew P. Knight

The current research explores how awareness of shared attention influences attitude formation. We theorized that sharing the experience of an object with fellow group members would increase elaborative processing, which in turn would intensify the effects of participant mood on attitude formation. Four experiments found that observing the same object as similar others produced more positive ratings among those in a positive mood, but more negative ratings among those in a negative mood. Participant mood had a stronger influence on evaluations when an object had purportedly been viewed by similar others than when (a) that same object was being viewed by dissimilar others, (b) similar others were viewing a different object, (c) different others were viewing a different object, or (d) the object was viewed alone with no others present. Study 4 demonstrated that these effects were driven by heightened cognitive elaboration of the attended object in the shared attention condition. These findings support the theoretical conjecture that an object attended with ones ingroup is subject to broader encoding in relation to existing knowledge structures.


Organization Science | 2015

Mood at the Midpoint: Affect and Change in Exploratory Search Over Time in Teams That Face a Deadline

Andrew P. Knight

The purpose of this paper is to advance the team dynamics and group development literatures by developing and testing a theoretical model of how affect shapes transitions in teams over time. Integrating the group transitions literature with theory and research on the mood-as-input theory, I propose that shared team mood influences the extent to which team members seek out and experiment with alternative ways of completing their work at different points in a team’s life. In the first half of the team’s life, when team members are relatively task-focused, I argue that team positive mood (i.e., a positively valenced affective state shared by team members at a given point in time) stimulates, whereas team negative mood (i.e., a negatively valenced affective state shared by team members) suppresses, exploratory search. At the temporal midpoint, however, when team members’ focus on performance heightens, team positive mood acts as a shutoff switch for search, leading to a decline in exploratory search over the second half of the team’s life. Team negative mood at the midpoint, on the other hand, leads team members to persist in exploratory search, even as a deadline draws near. A team’s trajectory of exploratory search over time, I propose, influences team performance such that it is highest when teams engage in high exploratory search early in the team’s life and decline in exploratory search over the second half of the team’s life. The results of a longitudinal, survey-based study of teams preparing for a military competition largely support my predictions.


Social Psychological and Personality Science | 2014

Get Up, Stand Up The Effects of a Non-Sedentary Workspace on Information Elaboration and Group Performance

Andrew P. Knight; Markus Baer

Non-sedentary work configurations, which encourage standing rather than sitting in the course of work, are becoming increasingly prevalent in organizations. In this article, we build and test theory about how non-sedentary arrangements influence interpersonal processes in groups performing knowledge work—tasks that require groups to combine information to develop creative ideas and solve problems. We propose that a non-sedentary workspace increases group arousal, while at the same time decreasing group idea territoriality, both of which result in better information elaboration and, indirectly, better group performance. The results of an experimental study of 54 groups engaged in a creative task provide support for this dual pathway model and underscore the important role of the physical space in which a group works as a contextual input to group processes and outcomes.


Academy of Management Journal | 2017

Organizational affective tone: a meso perspective on the origins and effects of consistent affect in organizations

Andrew P. Knight; Jochen I. Menges; Heike Bruch

Grounded in an open systems perspective, we build and test new theory about how the kinds of industries in which an organization participates influence organizational affective tone and connect to workforce strain. We propose that themore an organization’s activities lie in consumer-centric industries (e.g., service, retail), the more positive and less negative the organization’s affective tone. We connect consumer-centric industry participation and affective tone by explaining how personnel policies and organizational structure generate and sustain consistent positive and negative affect throughout an organization. Additionally, we examine the effects of organizational affective tone on workforce strain. The results of a survey-based study of 24,015 human resource managers, top management team members, and employees of 161 firms largely support our predictions. We discuss the implications of considering macro contextual factors for understanding affect in organizations.


Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes | 2011

When team members' values differ: The moderating role of team leadership

Katherine J. Klein; Andrew P. Knight; Jonathan C. Ziegert; Beng Chong Lim; Jessica L. Saltz


Academy of Management Journal | 2015

Who Defers to Whom and Why? Dual Pathways Linking Demographic Differences and Dyadic Deference to Team Effectiveness

Aparna Joshi; Andrew P. Knight


Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes | 2011

But Affirmative Action hurts Us! Race-related beliefs shape perceptions of White disadvantage and policy unfairness

Garriy Shteynberg; Lisa M. Leslie; Andrew P. Knight; David M. Mayer


Academy of Management Review | 2017

Resources and Relationships in Entrepreneurship: An Exchange Theory of the Development and Effects of the Entrepreneur-Investor Relationship

Laura Huang; Andrew P. Knight


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2014

Who Defers to Whom and Why? Demographic Differences and Dyadic Deference in Teams

Aparna Joshi; Andrew P. Knight

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Markus Baer

Washington University in St. Louis

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Aparna Joshi

Pennsylvania State University

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Laura Huang

University of Pennsylvania

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