Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining
Social exchange theory suggests that after receiving help, people reciprocate by helping the original helpgiver. However, we propose that help recipients may respond negatively and harm the help giver when they perceive helping as a status threat and experience envy. Integrating the helping as statu...
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2023
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-81052023-05-31T02:14:24Z Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining TAI, Kenneth LIN, Katrina Jia LAM, Catherice K. LIU, Wu Social exchange theory suggests that after receiving help, people reciprocate by helping the original helpgiver. However, we propose that help recipients may respond negatively and harm the help giver when they perceive helping as a status threat and experience envy. Integrating the helping as status relations framework and the social functional perspective of envy, we examine when and why receiving help may prompt help recipients to undermine help givers. Across four studies, we find progressive support for our results, which show that when individuals receive task-related help from help givers who are perceived to be more, rather than less, competent than them, they experience greater status threat and envy. As help recipients experience envy toward help givers, they are likely to undermine help givers, and this positive relationship becomes stronger for help recipients who have higher status striving motivation. Our findings underscore the status dynamics implicated in helping interactions by highlighting that help recipients, especially those with higher status striving motivation, may paradoxically undermine help givers when they perceive status threat from and feel envious of help givers, as a result of receiving help from more competent help givers. 2023-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7106 info:doi/10.1037/apl0000580 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/8105/viewcontent/Biting_the_hand_that_feeds__A_status_based_model_of_when_and_why.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University receiving help status threat envy relative competence social undermining Applied Behavior Analysis Organizational Behavior and Theory Social Psychology |
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receiving help status threat envy relative competence social undermining Applied Behavior Analysis Organizational Behavior and Theory Social Psychology TAI, Kenneth LIN, Katrina Jia LAM, Catherice K. LIU, Wu Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
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Social exchange theory suggests that after receiving help, people reciprocate by helping the original helpgiver. However, we propose that help recipients may respond negatively and harm the help giver when they perceive helping as a status threat and experience envy. Integrating the helping as status relations framework and the social functional perspective of envy, we examine when and why receiving help may prompt help recipients to undermine help givers. Across four studies, we find progressive support for our results, which show that when individuals receive task-related help from help givers who are perceived to be more, rather than less, competent than them, they experience greater status threat and envy. As help recipients experience envy toward help givers, they are likely to undermine help givers, and this positive relationship becomes stronger for help recipients who have higher status striving motivation. Our findings underscore the status dynamics implicated in helping interactions by highlighting that help recipients, especially those with higher status striving motivation, may paradoxically undermine help givers when they perceive status threat from and feel envious of help givers, as a result of receiving help from more competent help givers. |
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text |
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TAI, Kenneth LIN, Katrina Jia LAM, Catherice K. LIU, Wu |
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TAI, Kenneth LIN, Katrina Jia LAM, Catherice K. LIU, Wu |
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TAI, Kenneth |
title |
Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
title_short |
Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
title_full |
Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
title_fullStr |
Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
title_full_unstemmed |
Biting the hand that feeds: A status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
title_sort |
biting the hand that feeds: a status-based model of when and why receiving help motivates social undermining |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2023 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7106 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/8105/viewcontent/Biting_the_hand_that_feeds__A_status_based_model_of_when_and_why.pdf |
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