Research Design Connection: Envy at Work

Envy in workplaces can arise for many reasons, imagined or real (consider variations in desk chairs provided). Koopman, at the University of Cincinnatiā€™s College of Business, has found ā€œa strong link between an employeeā€™s feelings of envy after they perceive a supervisor has treated them worse relative to their co-workers and the length of time by which they process this information.ā€

A key concept discussed by Koopman is ā€œepistemic motivationā€ (EM) ā€“ the desire to process information thoroughly and grasp the meaning behind a particular situationā€¦people high in such motivation are more sensitive to nuance and devote more time to processing new information as it comes inā€¦ā€˜Research has shown that most creative working environments ā€“ ones that require a strong ability to negotiate and attend to detail ā€“ value employees who have a high level of epistemic motivation,ā€™ says Koopmanā€¦ā€˜The workers who are valuable for problem-solving, skilled negotiating and finding timely solutions are also the ones who ruminate longer over processing the social injustice and envy they feel,ā€™ says Koopman. ā€˜This [during his study]ā€¦negatively affected their overall productivity.ā€™ā€ This research was presented at the 2016 annual meeting of the Academy of Management.

ā€œThatā€™s Not Fair! – – Managing Envy in the Workplace.ā€ 2016. Press release, University of Cincinnati, http://www.uc.edu/news/nr.aspx?id=23777

Sally Augustin, PhD, a cognitive scientist, is the editor of Research Design Connections (www.researchdesignconnections.com), a monthly subscription newsletter and free daily blog, where recent and classic research in the social, design, and physical sciences that can inform designersā€™ work are presented in straightforward language. Readers learn about the latest research findings immediately, before theyā€™re available elsewhere. Sally, who is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, is also the author of Place Advantage: Applied Psychology for Interior Architecture (Wiley, 2009) and, with Cindy Coleman, The Designerā€™s Guide to Doing Research: Applying Knowledge to Inform Design (Wiley, 2012). She is a principal at Design With Science (www.designwithscience.com) and can be reached at sallyaugustin@designwithscience.com.