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Updated: Aug 2, 2025

A Cross-Disciplinary and Multi-Modal Experimental Design for Studying Near-Real-Time Authentic Examination Experiences
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When Workers Feel Like Objects: A Field Study on Self-Objectification and Affective Organizational Commitment.

Roberta Rosa Valtorta1, Maria Grazia Monaci2

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.

Europe'S Journal of Psychology
|April 17, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Workplace objectification, where jobs treat employees as objects, increases self-objectification. This, in turn, reduces affective organizational commitment among workers, particularly in lower-status roles.

Keywords:
affective organizational commitmentdehumanizationobjectificationself-objectificationworkers

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Area of Science:

  • Organizational Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Workplace Behavior

Background:

  • Objectification is a form of dehumanization, perceiving individuals as objects.
  • Research on workplace objectification is expanding into job features and employee commitment.
  • Self-objectification and its impact on organizational commitment require further investigation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the link between objectifying job features and self-objectification.
  • To examine the relationship between self-objectification and affective organizational commitment.
  • To investigate these dynamics within a real work setting.

Main Methods:

  • A quantitative study was conducted with 142 Italian supermarket clerks.
  • Data were collected on perceived objectifying job features, self-objectification, and affective organizational commitment.
  • Statistical analyses were used to test the hypothesized relationships.

Main Results:

  • Workers in low-status roles (cashiers, salespeople) perceived their jobs as more objectifying.
  • Higher perceived objectifying job features positively correlated with self-objectification.
  • Increased self-objectification was associated with decreased affective organizational commitment.

Conclusions:

  • Objectifying job features contribute to self-objectification in the workplace.
  • Self-objectification negatively impacts employees' commitment to their organization.
  • Findings highlight the interplay between social-psychological factors and organizational outcomes.