“…An important explanatory approach has highlighted supervisors' resource deficits as a critical antecedent, such that abusive supervision may occur more frequently if a supervisor lacks the capacity to effectively inhibit, override, or refrain from acting upon behavioral impulses (Wang, Sinclair, & Deese, ). Accordingly, scholars have linked indicators of resource deprivation (i.e., depressive symptoms, anxiety, and workplace alcohol consumption, Byrne et al, , as well as ego depletion, Courtright, Gardner, Smith, McCormick, & Colbert, ; Joosten, van Dijke, van Hiel, & De Cremer, ) with supervisors' abusive and deviant acts. When one extrapolates from these findings, it seems plausible to conceptualize abusive supervision as a supervisor's reaction to experiences of work stress and excessive job demands, such that supervisors are more likely to exhibit abusive behavior if they are emotionally exhausted from their work.…”