Results 211 to 220 of about 548 (239)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Evasive (Knowledge) Hiding and Task Performance: The Moderating Role of Job Resources

Academy of Management Proceedings, 2022
We take a knowledge hider’s perspective and follow the conservation of resources (COR) theory to investigate performance consequences of hiding knowledge from colleagues, particularly focusing on the contextual role of job design in stimulating or demotivating such behavior in work relationships.
Hernaus, Tomislav   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Workplace Ostracism and Knowledge Hiding: The Mediating Role of Job Tension

open access: yesSustainability, 2019
This study examined the impact of workplace ostracism on employees’ knowledge hiding behavior. Based on the conservation of resource theory, this study seeks to identify the effects of job tension as a mediator and the moderating effect of employee
Sidra Riaz, Yusen Xu, Shahid Hussain
exaly   +2 more sources

Hide and seek: evasion and search as FDI motivation

critical perspectives on international business, 2019
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to argue for inclusion of evasive foreign direct investment (FDI) into search-based motivation typologies in international business.Design/methodology/approachCritically reassessing academic literature and using anecdotal evidence, the authors augment the theory of FDI motivation with the concept of evasion ...
Brent Burmester, Joanna Scott-Kennel
openaire   +1 more source

Evasive (knowledge) hiding and task performance: the moderating role of accumulative job resources

Personnel Review, 2023
PurposeBuilding on the premise of conservation of resources theory (COR) that people protect their knowledge as a resource, the authors questioned whether the contextual nature of job resources buffers the counterintuitive positive relationship between evasive knowledge hiding (KH) and task performance.Design/methodology/approachTwo multisource field ...
Tomislav Hernaus   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The Moderating Effect of Cross-Cultural Psychological Adaptation on Knowledge Hiding and Employee Innovation Performance: Evidence from Multinational Corporations

open access: yesSustainability, 2022
This study explores the effects of three dimensions of knowledge hiding: evasive hiding (EH), rationalized hiding (RH), and playing dumb (PD), on employee innovation performance in multinational corporations. Additionally, the moderating effects of cross-
Shun-Chi Yu
exaly   +2 more sources

Hiding in plain sight: immune evasion by the staphylococcal protein SdrE

Biochemical Journal, 2017
The human immune system is responsible for identification and destruction of invader cells, such as the bacterial pathogen Staphylococcus aureus. In response, S. aureus brings to the fight a large number of virulence factors, including several that allow it to evade the host immune response. The staphylococcal surface protein SdrE was recently reported
Andrew B, Herr, Alexander W, Thorman
openaire   +2 more sources

Examining the Drivers and Consequences of Salesperson Evasive Hiding: An Abstract

2020
Salespeople often face the dilemma of having to protect their personally acquired market knowledge from others in their organization, while also seeming to be a team player. In order to not being perceived as being opportunistic by their colleagues, salespeople have the option of: (1) sharing their information, or (2) neglecting to divulge their ...
Nawar N. Chaker   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Defending the frontier: examining the impact of internal salesperson evasive knowledge hiding on perceptions of external customer outcomes

European Journal of Marketing, 2020
Purpose Salespeople frequently face the predicament of wanting to protect their market knowledge from coworkers while not appearing recalcitrant. Considering the choice of disclosing information or refusing to disclose, they may choose a third option: appearing to share knowledge while concealing substantive information, which this study calls evasive
Nawar N. Chaker   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Hide and seek: Cryptococcus evasion of microglial sensing enables meningitis

Cell Host & Microbe
In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Reyes et al.1 uncovered that delayed microglial activation provides Cryptococcus a temporal advantage in establishing central nervous system infections in a CD4+ T cell-competent setting. This delay carries implications for the development of severe cryptococcal meningoencephalitis and post-infection syndrome in ...
Jessica C, Hargarten, Amariliz, Rivera
openaire   +2 more sources

Pretending to cooperate. How speakers hide evasive actions

Argumentation, 1996
The paper is based on the following two assumptions. Firstly, evasive utterances are those which are semantically irrelevant to the question they are an answer to. Secondly, they can be divided into two main categories — overt and covert. The question to be asked as regards covert evasion is: How is it possible that an evasive speaker can nevertheless ...
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy