Your Articles, Anywhere

Jonathan H. Westover

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  1. 12/13/2025

    Emotional Dynamics and Work Performance: How Affective States Shape Daily Productivity Through Attentional Resources, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD

    Abstract: Individual work performance fluctuates considerably within persons across days and even hours, yet traditional performance models focus primarily on stable between-person differences. This article synthesizes recent research demonstrating that momentary affective states substantially influence episodic work performance through their impact on attentional resource allocation. Drawing on affective events theory and the episodic performance framework developed by Weiss and colleagues, we examine how negative emotional states misallocate attention away from task demands, impairing concurrent performance, while certain positive affective states can enhance attentional focus. We distinguish between background core affect and discrete emotion episodes, showing that emotion episodes—characterized by heightened arousal, cognitive elaboration, and regulatory demands—exert particularly strong effects on attention and subsequent depletion. The article integrates evidence from experience-sampling studies across diverse occupations and discusses organizational implications for performance management, work design, and employee wellbeing. Practitioners gain insight into managing the affective climate of work, designing tasks with appropriate attentional pull, and recognizing that daily performance variability represents meaningful psychological processes rather than mere measurement error. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    10 min
  2. 12/12/2025

    Reclaiming Human Leadership in the Age of AI: Evidence-Based Strategies for Navigating Disruption and Rediscovering Purpose, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD

    Abstract: Artificial intelligence is fundamentally disrupting traditional leadership paradigms, forcing organizations to reconsider what leadership means when machines can process information faster, generate competent outputs, and automate decisions at scale. This disruption manifests across four interconnected domains: meaning-making, identity, organizational systems, and leader development. Rather than rendering human leadership obsolete, AI clarifies what leadership has always been for—stewarding purpose, creating connection, and exercising judgment in contexts machines cannot comprehend. Drawing on organizational behavior research, developmental psychology, and case studies across technology, healthcare, and financial services sectors, this article examines how leading organizations are responding to AI-driven leadership disruption. Evidence suggests successful navigation requires shifting from expertise-based authority to inquiry-driven facilitation, from control-oriented management to adaptive systems stewardship, and from horizontal skill acquisition to vertical developmental growth. Organizations that intentionally cultivate human-centered leadership capabilities—meaning stewardship, reflective practice, distributed intelligence, and developmental capacity—position themselves to thrive amid technological transformation while preserving the irreducibly human elements that create organizational vitality and stakeholder wellbeing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    49 min
  3. 12/11/2025

    The Myth of the Workless Future: Why AI Will Reshape—Not Replace—Human Labor, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD

    Predictions of a fully automated, workless society within two decades have captured public imagination and policy attention. This article examines the empirical evidence and theoretical frameworks surrounding large-scale technological displacement, arguing that rather than eliminating work entirely, AI and automation are more likely to hollow out middle-skill occupations while preserving demand for high-touch human services and augmented knowledge work. Drawing on labor economics, organizational psychology, and technology adoption research, we identify three emerging workforce segments: AI-augmented super-workers, human-essential service providers, and a potentially marginalized middle tier facing structural displacement. The article evaluates organizational responses including skills development programs, hybrid human-AI work design, and social safety net innovations. We conclude that preventing a bifurcated "stipend society" requires proactive intervention in education systems, labor market institutions, and the psychological contract between workers, employers, and the state. The central challenge is not whether society can afford economic security for displaced workers, but whether existing political and cultural frameworks can accommodate such a transformation while preserving human agency and meaning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 5m
  4. 12/06/2025

    Introducing Anthropic Interviewer: What 1,250 Professionals Told Us About Working with AI, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD

    Abstract: This research introduces Anthropic Interviewer, an AI-powered tool designed to conduct large-scale qualitative interviews at unprecedented scale while maintaining conversational depth. To validate this methodology, we deployed the system to interview 1,250 professionals—comprising 1,000 general workforce participants, 125 scientists, and 125 creative professionals—about their experiences integrating AI into their work. Results indicate predominantly positive sentiment regarding AI's productivity impact, with 86% of general workforce participants reporting time savings and 97% of creatives noting efficiency gains. However, significant concerns emerged around social stigma (69% of general workforce), professional displacement (55% expressing anxiety), and verification reliability (particularly among scientists). Thematic analysis revealed divergent adoption patterns: general workforce professionals envision AI-augmented supervisory roles; creatives navigate productivity gains against peer judgment and identity concerns; scientists desire AI partnership but withhold trust for core research tasks. This study demonstrates both the viability of AI-mediated qualitative research at scale and provides empirical insight into how professionals across diverse domains are experiencing AI's integration into knowledge work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    38 min
  5. 12/05/2025

    Hybrid Work and Younger Workers: Why Leadership, Not Generational Preference, Defines Success, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD

    Abstract: Organizations continue to struggle with return-to-office mandates despite clear evidence that younger workers—particularly Generation Z—consistently prefer hybrid arrangements over fully remote or fully in-office models. This article examines the evidence on generational work preferences, the structural challenges facing distributed teams, and the leadership failures that undermine hybrid work effectiveness. Drawing on organizational behavior research and contemporary practice, we identify proximity bias, inadequate manager training for distributed leadership, and executive-employee policy inconsistencies as key barriers to hybrid work success. Evidence-based interventions include structured anchor-day systems with senior leadership modeling, distributed-team management capability building, activity-based workplace planning, and technology infrastructure that equalizes participation. Organizations that treat hybrid work as a leadership and systems challenge—rather than a generational attitude problem—demonstrate better outcomes in talent retention, performance equity, and team cohesion. The article concludes that sustainable hybrid models require deliberate design choices around presence, purposeful co-location activities, and managerial accountability for inclusive team practices. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    43 min

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