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Limiting fear and anger responses to anger expressions

Laura Rees (Smith School of Business, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada)
Ray Friedman (Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA)
Mara Olekalns (Melbourne Business School, Melbourne, Australia)
Mark Lachowicz (University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA)

International Journal of Conflict Management

ISSN: 1044-4068

Article publication date: 10 January 2020

Issue publication date: 18 June 2020

379

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to test how individuals’ emotion reactions (fear vs anger) to expressed anger influence their intended conflict management styles. It investigates two interventions for managing their reactions: hot vs cold processing and enhancing conflict self-efficacy.

Design/methodology/approach

Hypotheses were tested in two experiments using an online simulation. After receiving an angry or a neutral message from a coworker, participants either completed a cognitive processing task (E1) or a conflict self-efficacy task (E2), and then self-reported their emotions, behavioral activation/inhibition and intended conflict management styles.

Findings

Fear is associated with enhanced behavioral inhibition, which results in greater intentions to avoid and oblige and lower intentions to dominate. Anger is associated with enhanced behavioral activation, which results in greater intentions to integrate and dominate, as well as lower intentions to avoid and oblige. Cold (vs hot) processing does not reduce fear or reciprocal anger but increasing individuals’ conflict self-efficacy does.

Research limitations/implications

The studies measured intended reactions rather than behavior. The hot/cold manipulation effect was small, potentially limiting its ability to diminish emotional responses.

Practical implications

These results suggest that increasing employees’ conflict self-efficacy can be an effective intervention for helping them manage the natural fear and reciprocal anger responses when confronted by others expressing anger.

Originality/value

Enhancing self-efficacy beliefs is more effective than cold processing (stepping back) for managing others’ anger expressions. By reducing fear, enhanced self-efficacy diminishes unproductive responses (avoiding, obliging) to a conflict.

Keywords

Citation

Rees, L., Friedman, R., Olekalns, M. and Lachowicz, M. (2020), "Limiting fear and anger responses to anger expressions", International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 31 No. 4, pp. 581-605. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCMA-01-2019-0016

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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