Abstract

The present study reports on the construction and validation of a new assessment instrument for self-conscious emotions in the work context, namely the Self-Conscious Emotions at Work Scale (SCEWS). In eight typical self-conscious work scenarios respondents have to indicate their emotional reaction in terms of 20 appraisals, subjective experiences, and action tendencies that are relevant and representative for the domain of self-conscious emotions. In total 512 students and 467 working adults completed the SCEWS and reported the frequency of positive emotions, anger, anxiety and sadness. In both samples a three-factorial structure emerged with a guilt, a shame/humiliation, and an anger in self-conscious situations factor. These three self-conscious emotion factors correlated differentially and in a predicted way with the frequency of emotions. Guilt-proneness was predicted to be psychologically constructive and correlated to the frequency of positive emotions. The proneness to shame/humiliation was expected to relate to internalising psychopathological tendencies, and positively correlated to a frequency of anxiety and sadness. Proneness to anger in self-conscious situations was expected to relate to externalising psychopathological tendencies and correlated with the frequency of anger in general. The present study demonstrates that self-conscious emotions can be validly measured in the work context. The new instrument allows for the systematic study of the role of self-conscious emotions in work and organisational behaviour.

Highlights

  • The role of emotional phenomena in the work and organisational domain has mainly been studied through the lens of the broad dimensions of positive and negative emotions (Gooty, Gavin, & Ashkanasy, 2009)

  • These two broad dimensions certainly capture a fundamental source of variation in the emotion domain, they overlook the very different dynamics that differentiate specific positive and negative emotions which are likely to lead to very different behavioural outcomes

  • The present study focused on the construction and validation of the Self-Conscious Emotions at Work Scale

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Summary

Introduction

The role of emotional phenomena in the work and organisational domain has mainly been studied through the lens of the broad dimensions of positive and negative emotions (Gooty, Gavin, & Ashkanasy, 2009). Based on the clinical work of Harder (1995), Tangney defined proneness to guilt as the inclination to take responsibility for one’s actions and the motivation to set right the wrong done, and proneness to shame as the inclination to focus negatively on the global self (see Tangney & Dearing, 2002 for an overview) Both self-conscious emotions are painful for the person and may motivate persons to defend themselves against these emotions (Tangney, 1990; Tracy & Robins, 2004). According to Tangney and colleagues, proneness to guilt, shame, externalisation, and detachment represent individual differences in the self-conscious emotion domain

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