“…Mediation in existing research is usually explained through traditional social psychology perspectives, such as the social exchange theory, social identity theory, social cognitive theory, motivation theory, etc. The mediators of the relationship between leadership and taking-charge behavior mainly include psychological cognitive factors (e.g., role-breadth, self-efficacy, entitlement, organizational identification, insider status, trust in leader, and identification with leader) (Li et al, 2013(Li et al, , 2015Ouyang et al, 2015;Lee, 2016;Li J. et al, 2016), motivation (Homberg et al, 2017), emotion or attitude (e.g., positive affect and work engagement) (Fritz and Sonnentag, 2009;Xu et al, 2018), and individual behavior (e.g., feedback-seeking) (Qian et al, 2018). On the one hand, our research validates the positive impact of inclusive leadership on taking-charge behavior from the perspective of social information processing theory.…”