Humor in leader-follower relationships: Humor styles, similarity and relationship quality
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Barbara Wisse
Barbara Wisse is an adjunct professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Groningen. She received her Ph.D. from Leiden University in 1999. Her research interests include leadership, power, self and identity, emotions, and change.and Eric Rietzschel
Eric Rietzschel is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Groningen. He received his Ph.D. from Utrecht University in 2005. His research interests include creativity, motivation, and team performance.
Abstract
The present study focuses on how humor may affect the quality of the relationship between leader and follower (LMX). More specifically, we examined the impact of follower self-reported humor style and leader self-reported humor style on the extent to which followers perceived their relationship with their leader to be of high quality (in terms of affect, loyalty, contribution and professional respect). We also investigated the role of congruence between leader humor style and follower humor style in the reported quality of their relationship. We present the results of a multi-level study of leaders (N = 88) and their followers (N = 257) showing that LMX is positively related to follower affiliative humor style and negatively related to follower aggressive humor style. In addition, LMX is higher with stronger congruence in self-defeating humor styles: leaders' self-defeating humor was positively associated with LMX when followers were high (and not when they were low) in self-defeating humor. These results imply that future studies may benefit from differentiating between different humor styles in order to better understand the role of humor in the intricate relationship between leaders and their followers.
About the authors
Barbara Wisse is an adjunct professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Groningen. She received her Ph.D. from Leiden University in 1999. Her research interests include leadership, power, self and identity, emotions, and change.
Eric Rietzschel is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Groningen. He received his Ph.D. from Utrecht University in 2005. His research interests include creativity, motivation, and team performance.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Kynical dogs and cynical masters: Contemporary satire, politics and truth-telling
- Hoisan-wa in jest: Humor, laughter, and the construction of counter-hegemonic affect in contemporary Chinese American language maintenance
- Relationship-focused humor styles and relationship satisfaction in dating couples: A repeated-measures design
- Humor in leader-follower relationships: Humor styles, similarity and relationship quality
- Experimentally observed responses to humor are related to individual differences in emotion perception and regulation in everyday life
- An explorative study into the possible benefits of using humor in creative tasks with a class of primary five pupils
- Assessing humor at work: The humor climate questionnaire
- The analysis of elementary and high school students' natural and humorous responses patterns in coping with embarrassing situations
- Patriarchy and New Comedy in Ancient Athens and Rome: Revisiting Northrop Frye's “Mythos of Spring: Comedy”
- Book reviews
- Book Review
- Book Review
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