Remote but not forgotten: Ameliorating the negative effects of professional isolation through family supportive supervisor behaviors and schedule flexibility.

· Journal of Business and Psychology · Trzebiatowski, T. M., Henle, C. A

We found employees who experience higher levels of professional isolation feel more depletion and less global and cognitive job engagement with the results not differing between the two. Further, employees who have a misalignment of resources (low family supportive supervisor behaviors paired with high schedule flexibility; high family supportive supervisor behaviors paired with low schedule flexibility) feel the depleting effects of professional isolation on cognitive engagement (and not global job engagement) more strongly than when both resources are high and when both resources are low.

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