Exposure to workplace harassment and the Five Factor Model of personality: A meta-analysis
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Date
2017Metadata
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Original version
Personality and Individual Differences 104 (2017) January: 195 – 206 10.1016/j.paid.2016.08.015Abstract
Although a growing body of studies has investigated the role of personality traits as correlates of exposure to
workplace harassment, the true magnitude of the relationships between harassment and targets' personality
characteristics remains unknown. To address this issue, relationships between traits in the Five-Factor Model
of personality and exposure to harassment were examined by means of meta-analysis. Including studies published
up until January 2015, 101 cross-sectional effect sizes from 36 independent samples, totaling 13,896 respondents,
showed that exposure to harassment was positively associated with neuroticism (r = 0.25;
p b 0.01; K = 32), and negatively associated with extraversion (r = −0.10; p b 0.05; K = 17), agreeableness
(r=−0.17**; p b 0.01; K=19), and conscientiousness (r=−0.10* p b 0.05; K=22). Harassment was not related
to openness (r=0.04p N 0.05; K=11).Moderator analyses showed that the associations between harassment
and neuroticism, agreeableness and conscientiousness, respectively, were conditioned by measurement
method for harassment, type of harassment investigated, and geographical origin of study. Summarized, the findings
provide evidence for personality traits as correlates of exposure to workplace harassment.
Description
This is the original article as published by Elsevier. License: CC-BY-NC-ND