Turning molehills into mountains: Sleepiness increases workplace interpretive bias
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Barber, Larissa K. (Author)
- Budnick, Christopher J. (Author)
Title
Turning molehills into mountains: Sleepiness increases workplace interpretive bias
Abstract
Three studies draw from evolutionary theory to assess whether sleepiness increases interpretive biases in workplace social judgments. Study 1 established a relationship between sleepiness and interpretive bias using ambiguous interpersonal scenarios from a measure commonly used in personnel selection (N = 148). Study 2 explored the boundary conditions of the sleepiness–interpretive bias link via an experimental online field survey of U.S. adults (N = 433). Sleepiness increased interpretive bias when social threats were clearly present (unfair workplace) but did not affect bias in the absence of threat (fair workplace). Study 3 replicated and extended findings from the previous two studies using objective measures of sleep loss and a quasi-experimental manipulation of minor sleep loss (N = 175). Negative affect, ego depletion, or personality variables did not influence the observed relationships. Overall, results suggest that a self-protection/evolutionary perspective best explains the effects of sleepiness on workplace interpretive biases. These studies advance the current research on sleep in organizations by adding a cognitive “threat interpretation” bias approach to past work examining the emotional reaction/behavioral side of sleep disruption. Interpretive biases due to sleepiness may have significant implications for employee health and counterproductive behavior. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Publication
Journal of Organizational Behavior
Date
2015
Volume
36
Issue
3
Pages
360-381
DOI
Citation Key
barberTurningMolehillsMountains2015
Accessed
2/28/25, 4:38 PM
ISSN
1099-1379
Short Title
Turning molehills into mountains
Language
en
Library Catalog
Wiley Online Library
License
Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Extra
Citation
Barber, L. K., & Budnick, C. J. (2015). Turning molehills into mountains: Sleepiness increases workplace interpretive bias. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 36(3), 360–381. https://doi.org/10.1002/job.1992
Link to this record