# Work-family interfaces and leaders’ knowledge hiding: underlying mechanisms and contingencies

**Authors:** Min Min, Kai Fang, Zhen Zhang, Ziyue Xu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1666321 · 2025-11-06

## TL;DR

This study explores how work-family conflicts affect leaders' tendency to hide knowledge, finding that family interference with work increases knowledge hiding.

## Contribution

The study is among the first to investigate how work-family interfaces influence leaders' knowledge-hiding behavior and its underlying mechanisms.

## Key findings

- Family interference with work (FIW) positively relates to leaders' knowledge hiding.
- Affective organizational commitment partially mediates the relationship between FIW and knowledge hiding.
- Organization-based self-esteem weakens the impact of FIW on affective organizational commitment.

## Abstract

The current study aims to examine the effects of work interference with family (WIF) and family interference with work (FIW) on leaders’ knowledge hiding, as well as the mediating role of affective organizational commitment and the contingent role of organization-based self-esteem.

Data were collected through a three-wave survey from 137 new product team leaders in China, with a 2-week interval between waves to reduce common method bias.

Our findings indicate that FIW was positively related to knowledge hiding. This positive linkage was partially mediated by affective organizational commitment. Organization-based self-esteem weakens the impact of FIW on affective organizational commitment. In addition, as affective organizational commitment increased, the positive indirect effect of FIW on knowledge hiding becomes weaker. By contrast, the relevant results related to the effect of WIF were not significant.

Extant research on micro-innovation has mainly highlighted the within-domain stressful effects of job conflicts but largely neglected their cross-domain mechanisms in shaping leaders’ knowledge behaviors. This study is one of the first to investigate how and when work-family interfaces influence top-down knowledge-hiding behavior. Practically, the findings provide guidance for organizations to design family-supportive and esteem-enhancing HR practices to reduce leaders’ knowledge hiding driven by FIW.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CMB (MESH:D020326), CMV (MESH:D003586)
- **Chemicals:** WIF (-)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12631326/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12631326