Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression
Four experiments were conducted to investigate the implications of ‘substantive’ responses for the repair of trust following a violation and the cognitive processes that govern how and when they are effective. These studies examined two forms of substantive responses, penance and regulation, that re...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-40952016-03-13T07:24:04Z Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression DIRKS, Kurt T. KIM, Peter H. FERRIN, Don COOPER, Cecily D. Four experiments were conducted to investigate the implications of ‘substantive’ responses for the repair of trust following a violation and the cognitive processes that govern how and when they are effective. These studies examined two forms of substantive responses, penance and regulation, that represent different categories of trust repair attempts. The findings from Studies 1–3 suggest that both can be effective to the extent that they elicit the crucial mediating cognition of perceived repentance. Data from Study 2 revealed that trustors saw signals of repentance as more informative when the transgression was due to a lapse of competence than due to a lapse of integrity. Study 4 compared these substantive responses to apologies (a non-substantive response) and revealed that, despite their surface-level differences, they each repaired trust through ‘perceived repentance.’ The paper offers an integrative framework for understanding the relationships among a range of trustor responses. 2011-03-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3096 info:doi/10.1016/j.obhdp.2010.10.003 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2010.10.003 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Trust Leadership Repentance Human Resources Management Organizational Behavior and Theory |
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Trust Leadership Repentance Human Resources Management Organizational Behavior and Theory DIRKS, Kurt T. KIM, Peter H. FERRIN, Don COOPER, Cecily D. Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression |
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Four experiments were conducted to investigate the implications of ‘substantive’ responses for the repair of trust following a violation and the cognitive processes that govern how and when they are effective. These studies examined two forms of substantive responses, penance and regulation, that represent different categories of trust repair attempts. The findings from Studies 1–3 suggest that both can be effective to the extent that they elicit the crucial mediating cognition of perceived repentance. Data from Study 2 revealed that trustors saw signals of repentance as more informative when the transgression was due to a lapse of competence than due to a lapse of integrity. Study 4 compared these substantive responses to apologies (a non-substantive response) and revealed that, despite their surface-level differences, they each repaired trust through ‘perceived repentance.’ The paper offers an integrative framework for understanding the relationships among a range of trustor responses. |
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DIRKS, Kurt T. KIM, Peter H. FERRIN, Don COOPER, Cecily D. |
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DIRKS, Kurt T. KIM, Peter H. FERRIN, Don COOPER, Cecily D. |
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DIRKS, Kurt T. |
title |
Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression |
title_short |
Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression |
title_full |
Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression |
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Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression |
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Understanding the Effects of Substantive Responses on Trust Following a Transgression |
title_sort |
understanding the effects of substantive responses on trust following a transgression |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2011 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3096 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2010.10.003 |
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