“…Workplace ostracism is ‘the extent to which an individual perceives that he or she is ignored or excluded by others’ in the workplace (Ferris, Brown, Berry, & Lian, 2008, p. 1348), often manifested as the silent treatment or giving the cold shoulder (Fox & Stallworth, 2005; Williams, 2007). Its detrimental effects for employees, such as lower job satisfaction, reduced job performance, higher turnover intentions, and psychological distress (e.g., Ferris et al ., 2008; Ferris, Lian, Brown, & Morrison, 2015; Wu, Yim, Kwan, & Zhang, 2012), have been widely reported (see Howard, Cogswell, & Smith, 2020, a meta‐analytic review) and prompted efforts to identify factors that might help employees cope. Individual characteristics, such as a proactive personality, strong political skills (Zhao, Peng, & Sheard, 2013), low intrinsic work motivation (Lyu & Zhu, 2019), or stronger group identification (Xu, Huang, & Robinson, 2017), may help alleviate the destructive effects of workplace ostracism.…”