PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

'Service with a smile' plus tipping leads to sexual harassment for majority of service employees

2021-07-19
(Press-News.org) Two common practices in the U.S. restaurant industry -- service with a smile and tipping -- contribute to a culture of sexual harassment, according to new research from the University of Notre Dame.

"A perfect storm: Customer sexual harassment as a joint function of financial dependence and emotional labor" was recently published in the Journal of Applied Psychology from Timothy Kundro, assistant professor of management and organization at Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business.

In the study, co-authored by Alicia Grandey and Vanessa Burke from Penn State University and Gordon Sayre from Emlyon Business School in France, more than 66 percent of restaurant employees reported facing some form of sexual harassment in the past six months.

Previous research has looked at the idea that customers can engage in sexual harassment. But this study is the first to examine why sexual harassment is so pervasive in the service industry itself. It's also the first to empirically link tipping to sexual harassment. 

"Service employee dependence on tips and requirements for friendly displays lead customers to experience a heightened sense of power -- which can lead them to engage in sexual harassment," said Kundro, whose research examines when and why employees engage in dysfunctional behavior, specifically looking at ethics, discrimination and impression management. "We show it's really the joint effects of customer tipping and requirements for positive gestures that drive sexual harassment. When either isn't present, customers don't feel the same sense of power."

The team conducted two studies. In the first, they asked 92 full-time service employees to report the percentage of their income dependent on tips and the extent to which their organization requires them to maintain positive displays with customers. The researchers asked the service employees to report how much power they felt customers had and then asked the employees to report how frequently they experience sexual harassment. 

The team recruited 229 men for the second study to analyze the customer perspective. They manipulated the dependence on tips and the facial display of the waitress. The men then reported the extent to which they would feel power and would engage in sexual harassment behaviors.

"It's really compelling, in my view," Kundro said, "because we replicated this from both the perspective of the employee and the customer and our findings for each were the same -- employees who rely on tips face more sexual harassment, but only when required to engage in 'service with a smile.'"

The study suggests that service organizations can reduce customer power and sexual harassment by eliminating tipping dependence and/or requirements for "service with a smile."

"You really can't have both," Kundro said. "Yet, organizations often do -- which may explain why sexual harassment is so pervasive in the service industry. Our research shows that paying a fair wage or eliminating tipping practices can reduce the power differential between a service worker and an employee. Alternatively, organizations can also reduce or eliminate positive display requirements."

INFORMATION:

To learn more, visit the Journal of Applied Psychology website at https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fapl0000895.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The climate impact of wild pigs greater than a million cars

The climate impact of wild pigs greater than a million cars
2021-07-19
By uprooting carbon trapped in soil, wild pigs are releasing around 4.9 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide annually across the globe, the equivalent of 1.1 million cars. An international team led by researchers from The University of Queensland and The University of Canterbury have used predictive population models, coupled with advanced mapping techniques to pinpoint the climate damage wild pigs are causing across five continents. UQ's Dr Christopher O'Bryan said the globe's ever-expanding population of feral pigs could be a significant threat to the climate. "Wild pigs are just like tractors ploughing through fields, turning over soil to find food," Dr O'Bryan said. "When soils are ...

Researchers: HtrA1 augmentation is potential therapy for age-related macular degeneration

Researchers: HtrA1 augmentation is potential therapy for age-related macular degeneration
2021-07-19
Research conducted at the Sharon Eccles Steele Center for Translational Medicine (SCTM) at the University of Utah's John A. Moran Eye Center explains why people carrying a block of genetic variants strongly associated with the development of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) may develop the disease and identifies a potential therapeutic pathway for slowing or even reversing disease progression. AMD is a major cause of irreversible blindness worldwide and the leading cause of blindness for Americans aged 55 and over. Following more than 15 years of research that has employed an extensive repository of donated human ocular ...

Global satellite data shows clouds will amplify global heating

2021-07-19
A new approach to analyse satellite measurements of Earth's cloud cover reveals that clouds are very likely to enhance global heating. The research, by scientists at Imperial College London and the University of East Anglia, is the strongest evidence yet that clouds will amplify global heating over the long term, further exacerbating climate change. The results, published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also suggest that at double atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations above pre-industrial levels, the climate is unlikely to warm below 2°C, and is more likely on average to warm more than 3°C. Pre-industrial CO2 levels were around 280 ppm (parts per million), ...

Using archeology to better understand climate change

2021-07-19
Throughout history, people of different cultures and stages of evolution have found ways to adapt, with varying success, to the gradual warming of the environment they live in. But can the past inform the future, now that climate change is happening faster than ever before? Yes, say an international team of anthropologists, geographers and earth scientists in Canada, the U.S. and France led by Université de Montréal anthropologist Ariane Burke. In a paper published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Professor Burke and her colleagues ...

Epicentre of major Amazon droughts and fires saw 2.5 billion trees and vines killed

Epicentre of major Amazon droughts and fires saw 2.5 billion trees and vines killed
2021-07-19
A major drought and forest fires in the Amazon rainforest killed billions of trees and plants and turned one of the world's largest carbon sinks into one of its biggest polluters. Triggered by the 2015-16 El Niño, extreme drought and associated mega-wildfires caused the death of around 2.5 billion trees and plants and emitted 495 million tonnes of CO2 from an area that makes up just 1.2 per cent of the entire Brazilian Amazon rainforest, and 1 per cent of the whole biome. The stark findings, discovered by an international team of scientists working for more than eight years on a long-term study in the Amazon before, during and after the El Niño, have significant implications for global efforts to control the atmospheric ...

Stanford researchers use high-speed cameras to reveal bubbles popping like blooming flowers

Stanford researchers use high-speed cameras to reveal bubbles popping like blooming flowers
2021-07-19
The oil industry, pharmaceutical companies and bioreactor manufacturers all face one common enemy: bubbles. Bubbles can form during the manufacturing or transport of various liquids, and their formation and rupture can cause significant issues in product quality. Inspired by these issues and the puzzling physics behind bubbles, an international scientific collaboration was born. Stanford University chemical engineer Gerald Fuller along with his PhD students Aadithya Kannan and Vinny Chandran Suja, as well as visiting PhD student Daniele Tammaro from the University of Naples, teamed up to study how different kinds of bubbles pop. The researchers were particularly interested in bubbles with proteins embedded on their surfaces, which is a common occurrence in the pharmaceutical industry ...

Seismic surveys have no significant impact on commercially valuable fish in NW Australia

Seismic surveys have no significant impact on commercially valuable fish in NW Australia
2021-07-19
New research has found marine seismic surveys used in oil and gas exploration are not impacting the abundance or behaviour of commercially valuable fishes in the tropical shelf environment in north-western Australia. The research is the first of its kind to use dedicated seismic vessels to measure the impacts of the survey's noise in an ocean environment, with the eight-month experiment conducted within a 2500 square kilometre fishery management zone near the Pilbara coast. It involved using multiple acoustic sensors, tagging 387 red emperor fish and deploying more than ...

CNIO researchers clarify the role of the two isoforms of KRAS, the most common oncogene in humans

CNIO researchers clarify the role of the two isoforms of KRAS, the most common oncogene in humans
2021-07-19
KRAS was one of the first oncogenes to be identified, a few decades ago. It is among the most common drivers of cancer and its mutations can be detected in around 25 per cent of human tumours. The development of KRAS inhibitors is, thus, an extremely active line of research. Effective results have been elusive so far, though - no KRAS inhibitor had been available until a month ago, when the FDA granted approval to Sotorasib. KRAS encodes two gene products, KRAS4A and KRAS4B, whose levels can vary across organs and embryonic stages. When KRAS mutates, both variants, or isoforms, are activated. Though, some studies have focussed on approaches to target only KRAS4B, since it usually found to be expressed at ...

Program seeks to reduce preventable cancers with free screening, same-day results

2021-07-19
Evidence shows that early detection and treatment of cancer can significantly improve health outcomes, however women in Mississippi, particularly in underserved populations, experience the worst health outcomes for cervical, breast, and oropharyngeal cancer. ...

Of lives and life years: 1918 influenza vs COVID-19

Of lives and life years: 1918 influenza vs COVID-19
2021-07-19
From the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic there have been countless comparisons to the 1918 influenza pandemic in terms of overall medical impact. Many of the comparisons addressed overall cases which, given the lack of a confirmatory lab test in 1918 and no meaningful case definitions for both pandemics, make such comparisons patently invalid. Overall mortality comparisons, although methodologically flawed as well, do offer a reasonably comparative outcome measure and offers a greater degree of validity. This measure is further enhanced when adjusted for population and average life years lost (see accompanying table for mortality comparisons ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Carnegie Science names Michael Blanton 12th Observatories Director

From mice to humans in five years: Microglia replacement paving the way for neurodegenerative disease therapies

To treat long COVID, we must learn from historical chronic illnesses, medical researchers say

Volcanic eruptions set off a chain of events that brought the Black Death to Europe

Environmental science: Volcanic activity may have brought the Black Death to medieval Europe

Public trust in scientists for cancer information across political ideologies in the US

Adverse experiences, protective factors, and obesity in Latinx and Hispanic youths

Researchers identify bacterial enzyme that can cause fatal heart conditions with pneumonia infections

Single enzyme failure found to drive neuron loss in dementia

Sudden cardiac death risk falls in colorectal cancer, but disparities persist

From lab to clinic: CU Anschutz launches Phase 1 clinical trial of promising combination therapy for resistant ovarian cancer

Renuka Iyer, MD, named new Chief Medical Officer for National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)

New organ-on-a-chip platform allows the testing of cancer vaccine efficacy in aging populations

No, we don't need more and more data about nature. We need more people to use the data

Research explores effect of parental depression symptoms on children’s reward processing

Phonetic or morpholexical issues? New study reveals L2 French ambiguity

Seeing inside smart gels: scientists capture dynamic behavior under stress

Korea University researchers create hydrogel platform for high-throughput extracellular vesicle isolation

Pusan National University researchers identify the brain enzyme that drives nicotine addiction and smoking dependence

Pathway discovered to make the most common breast cancer tumor responsive to immunotherapy

Air pollution linked to more severe heart disease

Where the elements come from

From static papers to living models: turning limb development research into interactive science

Blink and you will miss it: Magnetism switching in antiferromagnets

What’s the best way to expand the US electricity grid?

Global sports industry holds untapped potential for wildlife conservation

USF-led study reveals dramatic decline in some historic sargassum populations

Fullerenes for finer detailed MRI scans

C-Compass: AI-based software maps proteins and lipids within cells

Turning team spirit into wildlife action

[Press-News.org] 'Service with a smile' plus tipping leads to sexual harassment for majority of service employees