Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rebecca L. Schaumberg is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rebecca L. Schaumberg.


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2012

When Feeling Bad Leads to Feeling Good: Guilt-Proneness and Affective Organizational Commitment

Francis J. Flynn; Rebecca L. Schaumberg

The authors posit that higher levels of guilt-proneness are associated with higher levels of affective organizational commitment. To explain this counterintuitive link, the authors suggest that a dispositional tendency to feel guilt motivates individuals to exert greater effort on their work-related tasks that, in turn, strengthens their affinity for the organization. The authors tested this idea using a laboratory study and field data from 2 samples of working adults. Individuals who are more guilt-prone reported higher levels of organizational attachment compared with less guilt-prone individuals. Furthermore, mediation analyses indicate that the link between guilt-proneness and affective commitment is driven by greater task effort. The authors discuss the implications of these findings for understanding the affective drivers of commitment in organizations.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2012

Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown: the link between guilt proneness and leadership.

Rebecca L. Schaumberg; Francis J. Flynn

We propose that guilt proneness is a critical characteristic of leaders and find support for this hypothesis across 3 studies. Participants in the first study rated a set of guilt-prone behaviors as more indicative of leadership potential than a set of less guilt-prone behaviors. In a follow-up study, guilt-prone participants in a leaderless group task engaged in more leadership behaviors than did less guilt-prone participants. In a third, and final, study, we move to the field and analyze 360° feedback from a group of young managers working in a range of industries. The results indicate that highly guilt-prone individuals were rated as more capable leaders than less guilt-prone individuals and that a sense of responsibility for others underlies the positive relationship between guilt proneness and leadership evaluations.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Race, Ideology, and the Tea Party: A Longitudinal Study

Eric D. Knowles; Brian S. Lowery; Elizabeth P. Shulman; Rebecca L. Schaumberg

The Tea Party movement, which rose to prominence in the United States after the election of President Barack Obama, provides an ideal context in which to examine the roles of racial concerns and ideology in politics. A three-wave longitudinal study tracked changes in White Americans’ self-identification with the Tea Party, racial concerns (prejudice and racial identification), and ideologies (libertarianism and social conservatism) over nine months. Latent Growth Modeling (LGM) was used to evaluate potential causal relationships between Tea Party identification and these factors. Across time points, racial prejudice was indirectly associated with movement identification through Whites’ assertions of national decline. Although initial levels of White identity did not predict change in Tea Party identification, initial levels of Tea Party identification predicted increases in White identity over the study period. Across the three assessments, support for the Tea Party fell among libertarians, but rose among social conservatives. Results are discussed in terms of legitimation theories of prejudice, the “racializing” power of political judgments, and the ideological dynamics of the Tea Party.


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2017

Clarifying the link between job satisfaction and absenteeism: The role of guilt proneness.

Rebecca L. Schaumberg; Francis J. Flynn

We propose that the relationship between job satisfaction and absenteeism depends partly on guilt proneness. Drawing on withdrawal and process models of absenteeism, we argue that job satisfaction predicts absences for employees who are low (but not high) in guilt proneness because low guilt-prone people’s behaviors are governed more by fulfilling their own egoistic desires than by fulfilling others’ normative expectations. We find support for this prediction in a sample of customer service agents working for a major telecommunications company and a sample of working adults employed in a range of industries. In each study, we use measures of employees’ guilt proneness and job satisfaction to predict their subsequent workplace absences. In Study 2, we extend our hypothesis tests to 2 traits that are conceptually comparable to guilt proneness (i.e., moral identity and agreeableness), showing that these traits similarly moderate the relationship between job satisfaction and absenteeism. We discuss the implications of these findings for extant models of absenteeism and research on moral affectivity in the workplace.


Archive | 2009

Differentiating between grateful and indebted reactions to receiving help

Rebecca L. Schaumberg; Francis J. Flynn

This chapter aims to clarify the distinction between feeling grateful and feeling indebted. Often overlooked and underappreciated, the differences that define these unique affective experiences are critical to understanding the consequences of helping behavior. This chapter describes the psychological underpinnings of gratitude and indebtedness and outlines the ways in which previous research has conflated the two constructs. In addition, it puts forth a set of testable propositions that help distinguish the relative importance of gratitude and indebtedness in interpersonal relations. The implications of these ideas are discussed in the context of individual generosity, social exchange, and group dynamics.


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2010

Racial prejudice predicts opposition to Obama and his health care reform plan

Eric D. Knowles; Brian S. Lowery; Rebecca L. Schaumberg


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2009

Anti-egalitarians for Obama? Group-dominance motivation and the Obama vote

Eric D. Knowles; Brian S. Lowery; Rebecca L. Schaumberg


Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes | 2014

Desire for a positive moral self-regard exacerbates escalation of commitment to initiatives with prosocial aims

Rebecca L. Schaumberg; Scott S. Wiltermuth


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2016

Sidestepping the rock and the hard place: The private avoidance of prosocial requests

Stephanie Lin; Rebecca L. Schaumberg; Taly Reich


Academy of Management Journal | 2017

Self-reliance: A Gender Perspective on its Relationship to Communality and Leadership Evaluations

Rebecca L. Schaumberg; Francis J. Flynn

Collaboration


Dive into the Rebecca L. Schaumberg's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott S. Wiltermuth

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge