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Antecedents and intervention mechanisms: a multi-level study of R&D team’s knowledge hiding behavior

Weiwei Huo (SHU-UTS SILC Business School, Shanghai University, Shanghai, China)
Zhenyao Cai (SHU-UTS SILC Business School, Shanghai University, Shanghai, China)
Jinlian Luo (School of Economics and Management, Tong Ji University, Shanghai, China)
Chenghao Men (School of Economics and Management, Tong Ji University, Shanghai, China)
Ruiqian Jia (School of Economics and Management, Tong Ji University, Shanghai, China)

Journal of Knowledge Management

ISSN: 1367-3270

Article publication date: 12 September 2016

3441

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine why employees hide knowledge and how organizations intervene and influence the negative effects of knowledge hiding. This study builds and tests a theoretical model at both individual and team level.

Design/methodology/approach

Data were collected from universities, research institutes and enterprises’ research and development (R&D) teams in China via a two-wave survey. The final sample contained 417 cases. Hierarchical linear modeling was used to test hypotheses.

Findings

The results show that territoriality plays a mediating role between psychological ownership and knowledge hiding, and that organizational result justice negatively moderated the relationship between territoriality and knowledge hiding. Procedure justice negatively moderated the relationship between territoriality and rationalized hiding, and that between territoriality and evasive hiding. Interactive justice negatively moderated the relationship between territoriality and rationalized hiding, and that between territoriality and evasive hiding. There were thus interactive effects among territoriality, perceived knowledge value and psychological ownership; the relationship between individual psychological ownership and territoriality was weaker when perceived knowledge value was lower and task interdependence was higher, and stronger with higher perceived knowledge value and lower task interdependence.

Research limitations/implications

Territorial behaviors, such as knowledge hoarding and misleading within R&D teams, are the primary challenges for organizations’ positive activities, including internal sharing, teamwork and organizational goal accomplishment. Researching knowledge territoriality in the Chinese cultural context will help to distinguish territorial behaviors and to take preventive measures. In addition, this study not only enables managers to understand clearly the precipitating factors of knowledge territoriality and the relationships among them but also provides constructive strategies for reducing the negative effect of organizational intervention in knowledge territoriality.

Originality/value

This study adopts a multilevel modeling method and not only reveals the “black box” of interaction among psychological ownership, territoriality and knowledge hiding at the individual level but also probes the three-way interaction of perceived knowledge value, team task dependency and psychological ownership with territoriality at both individual and team levels, and then discusses the mediation effect of organizational justice on the relationship between territoriality and knowledge hiding. The conclusion of this study not only enriches the literature on knowledge hiding in the field of knowledge management but also helps to elucidate the function and intervention mechanism of knowledge hiding.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the Ministry of education of Humanities and Social Science project (Grant No. 13YJC630057) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 71302048, 71472137) for their financial support.

Citation

Huo, W., Cai, Z., Luo, J., Men, C. and Jia, R. (2016), "Antecedents and intervention mechanisms: a multi-level study of R&D team’s knowledge hiding behavior", Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 20 No. 5, pp. 880-897. https://doi.org/10.1108/JKM-11-2015-0451

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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