Humor and workplace stress: a longitudinal comparison between Australian and Chinese employees

Rong Wang,Darius Kwan Shing Chan,Yong Wah Goh, Melissa Penfold, Timothy Harper, Tim Weltewitz

ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF HUMAN RESOURCES(2018)

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Abstract
This study investigates how humor usage (including positive and negative humor styles) influences employees' responses to the same stressful events, namely, the auto-correlation between stress experiences at two time points. Moreover, it examines differences between Australian and Chinese employees in such effects via bicultural comparisons. Results from a two-wave survey of 109 Australian and 141 Chinese employees indicated that humor usage moderated the Stress(Time1)-Stress(Time2) relationship for Australian employees but not for Chinese employees. Specifically, the positive relationship between the two stress measures became weaker for Australians who were higher in humor than those lower in humor. Similarly, Positive humor mitigated the relationship between Stress(Time1) and Stress(Time2) only for the Australians but not the Chinese. However, Negative humor exerted no influence on the focal relationship in either sample. Organizations should encourage employees to use humor in effective ways, thereby improving stress coping skills and reducing workplace stress.
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Key words
Australia,China,humor,longitudinal study,workplace stress
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