Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy

Working in a toxic environment makes it harder to be productive. This study examines the direct impact of Machiavellianism and professional envy on research productivity (individual and group) with the moderating role of knowledge-hiding behaviors. For this purpose, through convenience sampling, an...

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Published in:Knowledge Management and E-Learning
Main Author: Chughtai M.S.; Mushtaque I.; Waqas H.; Raza H.; Angulo-Cabanillas L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hong Kong Bao Long Accounting And Secretarial Limited 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85151391397&doi=10.34105%2fj.kmel.2022.14.026&partnerID=40&md5=e396338d6f808d8992e240a510863250
id 2-s2.0-85151391397
spelling 2-s2.0-85151391397
Chughtai M.S.; Mushtaque I.; Waqas H.; Raza H.; Angulo-Cabanillas L.
Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
2022
Knowledge Management and E-Learning
14
4
10.34105/j.kmel.2022.14.026
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85151391397&doi=10.34105%2fj.kmel.2022.14.026&partnerID=40&md5=e396338d6f808d8992e240a510863250
Working in a toxic environment makes it harder to be productive. This study examines the direct impact of Machiavellianism and professional envy on research productivity (individual and group) with the moderating role of knowledge-hiding behaviors. For this purpose, through convenience sampling, an online survey through Google Docs was conducted, and 221 permanent faculty members from private sector higher education institutions participated. The impact of moderating variables between predictors and criterion variables was tested through PROCESS-macro. The findings of this study revealed that Machiavellianism and professional envy have a significant negative influence on individuals and as well group-based research productivity. In contrast, knowledge hiding behaviors of faculty members moderate the relationships between Machiavellianism, professional envy, and individual and group-based research productivity. © 2022 Hong Kong Bao Long Accounting And Secretarial Limited. All rights reserved.
Hong Kong Bao Long Accounting And Secretarial Limited
20737904
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Chughtai M.S.; Mushtaque I.; Waqas H.; Raza H.; Angulo-Cabanillas L.
spellingShingle Chughtai M.S.; Mushtaque I.; Waqas H.; Raza H.; Angulo-Cabanillas L.
Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
author_facet Chughtai M.S.; Mushtaque I.; Waqas H.; Raza H.; Angulo-Cabanillas L.
author_sort Chughtai M.S.; Mushtaque I.; Waqas H.; Raza H.; Angulo-Cabanillas L.
title Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
title_short Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
title_full Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
title_fullStr Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
title_sort Knowledge hiding behaviors as moderator between machiavellianism, professional envy and research productivity: Empirical evidence from emerging economy
publishDate 2022
container_title Knowledge Management and E-Learning
container_volume 14
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.34105/j.kmel.2022.14.026
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85151391397&doi=10.34105%2fj.kmel.2022.14.026&partnerID=40&md5=e396338d6f808d8992e240a510863250
description Working in a toxic environment makes it harder to be productive. This study examines the direct impact of Machiavellianism and professional envy on research productivity (individual and group) with the moderating role of knowledge-hiding behaviors. For this purpose, through convenience sampling, an online survey through Google Docs was conducted, and 221 permanent faculty members from private sector higher education institutions participated. The impact of moderating variables between predictors and criterion variables was tested through PROCESS-macro. The findings of this study revealed that Machiavellianism and professional envy have a significant negative influence on individuals and as well group-based research productivity. In contrast, knowledge hiding behaviors of faculty members moderate the relationships between Machiavellianism, professional envy, and individual and group-based research productivity. © 2022 Hong Kong Bao Long Accounting And Secretarial Limited. All rights reserved.
publisher Hong Kong Bao Long Accounting And Secretarial Limited
issn 20737904
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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