Search results for "Control"

showing 10 items of 13168 documents

Emotion recognition, emotional awareness and cognitive bias in individuals with bulimia nervosa

2008

Difficulties recognizing emotion have been reported for eating disordered individuals in relation to perception of emotions in others and emotional self-awareness. It remains unclear whether this is a perceptual or cognitive-affective problem. Clarification is sought and the question of a cognitive bias is addressed when interpreting facially expressed emotions. Twenty participants with bulimia nervosa (BN) and 20 normal controls (NC) were assessed for ability to recognize emotional and neutral expressions. Emotional self-awareness was also assessed. Significant differences were found for emotional self-awareness. For emotional faces, only a poorer recognition of the emotion, surprise, for …

AdultEmotion classificationEmotionsEmotional contagionDevelopmental psychologyPerceptual DisordersArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Surveys and QuestionnairesTask Performance and AnalysismedicineHumansExpressed emotionEmotional expressionBulimia NervosaPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesBulimia nervosaRecognition PsychologyCognitionAwarenessmedicine.diseaseControl GroupsSelf ConceptCognitive biasFacial ExpressionClinical PsychologyEating disordersPattern Recognition VisualSocial PerceptionVisual PerceptionFemaleCognition DisordersPsychologyJournal of Clinical Psychology
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Automation, workers' skills and job satisfaction.

2020

When industrial robots are adopted by firms in a local labor market, some workers are displaced and become unemployed. Other workers that are not directly affected by automation may however fear that these new technologies might replace their working tasks in the future. This fear of a possible future replacement is important because it negatively affects workers’ job satisfaction at present. This paper studies the extent to which automation affects workers’ job satisfaction, and whether this effect differs for high- versus low-skilled workers. The empirical analysis uses microdata for several thousand workers in Norway from the Working Life Barometer survey for the period 2016–2019, combin…

AdultEmploymentMaleLabour economicsEmerging technologiesEconomicsSciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesJobsOccupational safety and healthJob SatisfactionAutomationSociologyIndustrial EngineeringSalariesHumansOccupationsOccupational Healthmedia_commonPaceAgedLabor StudiesMultidisciplinaryNorwayMechanical EngineeringQRLabor MarketsRoboticsMiddle AgedControl EngineeringWork (electrical)Social systemUnemploymentMicrodata (HTML)Labor EconomicsUnemploymentSocial SystemsMedicineEngineering and TechnologyJob satisfactionFemaleBusinessRobotsResearch ArticlePloS one
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Factors associated with non-participation and dropout among cancer patients in a cluster-randomised controlled trial

2017

We investigated the impact of demographic and disease related factors on non-participation and dropout in a cluster-randomised behavioural trial in cancer patients with measurements taken between hospitalisation and 6 months thereafter. The percentages of non-participation and dropout were documented at each time point. Factors considered to be potentially related with non-participation and dropout were as follows: age, sex, marital status, education, income, employment status, tumour site and stage of disease. Of 1,338 eligible patients, 24% declined participation at baseline. Non-participation was higher in older patients (Odds Ratio [OR] 2.1, CI: 0.6-0.9) and those with advanced disease …

AdultEmploymentMalePatient DropoutsDiseaselaw.inventionYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled trialRisk FactorslawNeoplasmsSurveys and QuestionnairesOdds RatioCluster AnalysisHumansMedicine030212 general & internal medicineCluster randomised controlled trialLost to follow-upDropout (neural networks)AgedRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicAged 80 and overMarital Statusbusiness.industryAge FactorsOdds ratioMiddle AgedClinical trialOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMultivariate AnalysisIncomeEducational StatusMarital statusFemalePatient ParticipationbusinessDemographyEuropean Journal of Cancer Care
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Work–family conflict and enrichment from the perspective of psychosocial resources: Comparing Finnish healthcare workers by working schedules

2014

Abstract We examined work–family conflict (WFC) and work–family enrichment (WFE) by comparing Finnish nurses, working dayshifts (non-shiftworkers, n = 874) and non-dayshifts. The non-dayshift employees worked either two different dayshifts (2-shiftworkers, n = 490) or three different shifts including nightshifts (3-shiftworkers, n = 270). Specifically, we investigated whether different resources, i.e. job control, managers' work–family support, co-workers' work–family support, control at home, personal coping strategies, and schedule satisfaction, predicted differently WFC and WFE in these three groups. Results showed that lower managers' work–family support predicted higher WFC only among …

AdultEmploymentMaleScheduleTime FactorsHealth PersonnelJob controlWork–family conflictPersonnel Staffing and SchedulingPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationHuman Factors and ErgonomicsJob SatisfactionConflict PsychologicalSurveys and QuestionnairesWork Schedule ToleranceHealth careHumansPsychologyFamilyfamily conflictSafety Risk Reliability and QualityEngineering (miscellaneous)ta515FinlandWork–family enrichmentbusiness.industryPerspective (graphical)shiftworkta3142Femalefamily enrichmentPsychologybusinessSocial psychologyPsychosocialApplied Ergonomics
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Time pressure, working time control and long-term sickness absence

2015

Objectives Perceived time pressure at work has increased in most European countries during recent decades. Time pressure may be harmful for employees’ health and well-being. The aim of this register-based follow-up study is to investigate whether the effects of time pressure on long sickness absence vary by the level of working time control. Methods The data are taken from the Finnish Quality of Work Life Survey 2003 (n=3400), a representative sample of Finnish employees, combined with a register-based follow-up from Statistics Finland covering the years 2002–2006. In the 2003 survey, employees were asked about their perceived time pressure and to what extent they had control over working t…

AdultEmploymentMaleTime FactorsAdolescentControl (management)Time pressureInterviews as TopicQuality of life (healthcare)Risk FactorsWork Schedule ToleranceEnvironmental healthHumansMedicineRegistriesFinlandSickness absencebusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)Public Health Environmental and Occupational HealthMiddle AgedWorking timeTerm (time)Occupational DiseasesQuality of LifeAbsenteeismFemaleSick LeavebusinessStress PsychologicalFollow-Up StudiesOccupational and Environmental Medicine
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Gender and age distribution of motorcycle crashes in Spain.

2018

This study analysed motorcycle crashes in Spain. Ninety-nine thousand three hundred and four motorcycle crash reports filed in the years 2006-2011 were extracted from the Directorate General of Traffic database of crashes with victims. These data were analysed in terms of gender, age groups, trip purpose, type of crash, speed violation, day of the week, harm caused, use of helmet and psychophysical conditions of the driver to study the characteristics of motorcycle crashes in Spain and to assess the differences between male and female motorcycle drivers in these crashes. Significant differences were found in all the variables considered in the study, which implies gender differences in the …

AdultEmploymentMaleTime FactorsAdolescentNames of the days of the weekPoison controlDistribution (economics)CrashAge and genderYoung AdultAge DistributionLeisure ActivitiesAge groups0502 economics and businessHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSex Distribution050107 human factorsAged050210 logistics & transportationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAccidents TrafficMiddle AgedMotorcyclesSpainFemaleHead Protective DevicesPsychologybusinesshuman activitiesSafety ResearchDemographyInternational journal of injury control and safety promotion
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Psychological Distress, Family Support and Employment Status in First-Year University Students in Spain

2019

Mental disorders are consistently and closely related to psychological distress. At the start of the university period, the relationship between a student&rsquo

AdultEmploymentMalemedicine.medical_specialtySocial epidemiologyUniversitiesFamily supportHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisFamily supporteducationlcsh:MedicinePoison controlSocial WelfarePsychological distressSocial epidemiologySuicide preventionArticleOccupational safety and health03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinepsychological distressuniversitySurvey studyEmployment statusInjury preventionPrevalencemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineStudentsUniversitylcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSocial SupportHuman factors and ergonomicsfamily supportsocial epidemiologyCross-Sectional StudiesMental HealthSpainFamily medicineMedicina Preventiva y Salud PúblicaFemaleemployment statusPsychologyStress Psychological030217 neurology & neurosurgerysurvey studyInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Burnout during a long-term rehabilitation: comparing low burnout, high burnout - benefited, and high burnout - not benefited trajectories.

2009

To focus rehabilitation activities among burnout clients more effectively, it is important to investigate who benefits from burnout interventions. This study (N=85) aimed at identifying burnout trajectories in terms of benefit, that is, subgroups of clients who share similar mean levels and changes in burnout during a one-year rehabilitation intervention (17 days in total) with a six-month follow-up. After identifying the burnout trajectories, the relations of the trajectories with factors describing the clients, antecedents, and consequences of burnout during the one-year intervention were examined. Three burnout trajectories were identified by growth mixture modeling: (a) low burnout (n=3…

AdultEmploymentTime Factorsmedicine.medical_treatmentEmotionsPsychological interventionBurnoutOccupational burnoutJob SatisfactionArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Intervention (counseling)Surveys and QuestionnairesDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansBurnout ProfessionalInternal-External ControlLikelihood FunctionsRehabilitationDepressionRehabilitationFollow up studiesMiddle AgedPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyTreatment OutcomeMixture modelingPsychologyRehabilitation interventionsClinical psychologyAnxiety, stress, and coping
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Influence of the distance in a roundhouse kick's execution time and impact force in Taekwondo.

2009

Taekwondo, originally a Korean martial art, is well known for its kicks. One of the most frequently used kicks in competition is Bandal Chagui or roundhouse kick. Excellence in Taekwondo relies on the ability to make contact with the opponent's trunk or face with enough force in as little time as possible, while at the same time avoiding being hit. Thus, the distance between contestants is an important variable to be taken into consideration. Thirty-one Taekwondo athletes in two different groups (expert and novice, according to experience in competition) took part in this study. The purpose of this study was to examine both impact force and execution time in a Bandal Chagui or roundhouse ki…

AdultEngineeringAdolescentBiomedical EngineeringBiophysicsTorsion MechanicalPoison controlExecution timeHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineForce platformMuscle SkeletalSimulationAnalysis of VarianceMartial artsbiologybusiness.industryAthletesRehabilitationCompetitor analysisbiology.organism_classificationBiomechanical PhenomenaVariable (computer science)Lower ExtremityImpactbusinessMartial ArtsJournal of biomechanics
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Genetic and environmental factors in health-related behaviors: Studies on Finnish twins and twin families

2003

Family, twin and adoption studies have provided evidence for familial and genetic influences on individual differences in disease risk and in human behavior. Attempts to identify individual genes accounting for these differences have not been outstandingly successful to date, and at best, known genes account for only a fraction of the familiality of most traits or diseases. More detailed knowledge of the dynamics of gene action and of specific environmental conditions are needed. Twin and twin-family studies with multiple measurements of risk factors and morbidity over time can permit a much more detailed assessment of the developmental dynamics of disease risk and the unfolding of behavior…

AdultEngineeringAdolescentDatabases FactualHealth BehaviorTwinsPoison controlEnvironmentSuicide preventionRisk AssessmentOccupational safety and healthDevelopmental psychologyCohort StudiesFeeding and Eating Disorders03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsInjury preventionDiseases in TwinsHumansOperations managementFamilyGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseObesityRegistriesChildGenetics (clinical)Finland030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbusiness.industryObstetrics and GynecologyHuman factors and ergonomicsTwin Studies as TopicAlcoholismPopulation SurveillancePediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthTwin Studies as TopicMorbiditybusinessRisk assessment030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCohort study
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