Search results for "organizational behavior"

showing 10 items of 758 documents

Family-supportive organization perceptions, multiple dimensions of work–family conflict, and employee satisfaction : a test of model across five samp…

2008

Work-family conflict (WFC) is recognized as a major issue affecting both individual employees and their employers. Preliminary research shows that the more employees perceive their work environment as family-supportive, the less they experience WFC (Allen, 2001). Moreover, there are theoretical and empirical reasons to expect that by reducing WFC, a family-supportive work environment would enhance employees’ satisfaction with their job, family, and life in general. In addition, despite the impressive body of research that has been devoted to WFC, there have been few studies that have assessed WFC as a multidimensional construct, other than those that distinguish between directions of confli…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementConceptualizationEconomicsWork–family conflictmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesApplied psychologyLife satisfaction050109 social psychologyEducationTest (assessment)Multiple time dimensionsPerception0502 economics and business8. Economic growth0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesJob satisfactionLife-span and Life-course StudiesConstruct (philosophy)PsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementApplied Psychologymedia_commonJournal of vocational behavior
researchProduct

2019

In this diary study with N = 348 employees, we examine whether the contagion effect of workplace incivility transfers beyond one work day that is whether the experience of workplace incivility is r...

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementContagion effect05 social sciences050109 social psychologyReverse effectDaily diaryWork (electrical)0502 economics and businessRuminationmedicineWorkplace incivility0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedicine.symptomPsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementApplied PsychologyEuropean Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
researchProduct

Collective stress and coping in the context of organizational culture

2000

We examined from a cultural perspective how well-being was collectively defined, what were the sources of collective stress, and what kind of collective coping mechanisms were used to alleviate such stress in three divisions of a multinational company. In the first phase of the study we collected data on organizational culture by using individual thematic interviews ( N = 63). Applying the grounded theory methodology and an inductive analysis, specific cultures describing the divisions were identified. In terms of co-operation we found the following fundamental cultural recipes: joint focused efforts on money-making, despite the awareness of the common goals employees interested only in ful…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)05 social sciencesStressorOrganizational cultureSocial environment050109 social psychologyOrganisation climateGrounded theory8. Economic growth0502 economics and business0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesJob satisfactionPsychologySocial psychologyCritical Incident Technique050203 business & managementApplied PsychologyEuropean Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
researchProduct

Three-Way Interactions Among Interruptions/Multitasking Demands, Occupational Age, and Alertness: A Diary Study

2015

In this study, we examined the within-person relationships between workday “cognitive” stressors (multitasking demands and workflow interruptions) and strain (situational well-being throughout the day and irritation in the evening). We hypothesized that occupational age, in terms of job tenure and an indicator of functional age (alertness), would moderate these relationships in that employees with low experience and low alertness would suffer most from the stressors. We conducted a 5-day diary study in a sample of 123 nurses, with 4 measurements per day (3 taken during the work shift and 1 taken in the evening), and 1 survey (occupational age) and computer-based cognitive performance test b…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)EveningSociology and Political ScienceEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)StressorCognitionDevelopmental psychologyAlertnessIndustrial relationsHuman multitaskingEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceGeriatrics and GerontologyValence (psychology)Life-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologyWork, Aging and Retirement
researchProduct

Coping with Burnout Symptoms through Task Significance in Professionals Working with Individuals with Intellectual Disability

2021

ABSTRACT This study examined an intervention that links task significance (one’s job has a positive impact on other people) to burnout symptoms of professionals working in organizations for individuals with intellectual disability. Professionals assigned to the experimental condition participated in teams designed to enhance the positive impact of their work on others (task significance). To do so, teams focused on a task to improve the quality of life of individuals with intellectual disability. Professionals assigned to the control condition did not participate in these teams, and they continued with their usual work. All the participating professionals answered a questionnaire abou…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)Social Psychologylcsh:BF1-990educationIntellectual disabilityBurnoutteamsTask (project management)Teamstask significanceCynicismIntervention (counseling)Intellectual disabilitymedicineBurnoutPractical implicationsburnoutprofessionalsProfessionalsmedicine.diseasehumanitieslcsh:Psychologyintellectual disabilityMixed-design analysis of varianceTask significancePsychologypsychological phenomena and processesClinical psychologyRevista de Psicología del Trabajo y de las Organizaciones
researchProduct

The buffering effect of coping strategies in the relationship between job insecurity and employee well-being

2012

The modern labour market features job insecurity (JI) as an unavoidable stressor. This study considers the influence of personal coping strategies by combining the conservation of resources with spillover theory. Do coping strategies buffer the negative effects of JI on well-being (work engagement, marital satisfaction and emotional energy at work and home)? A cybernetic coping scale distinguishes five coping strategies and a survey of 2764 Finnish employees reveals that changing the situation and symptom reduction buffer the negative effect of JI on emotional energy at work and home, respectively. Devaluation and accommodation have buffering tendencies in relation to work engagement and m…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)Strategy and ManagementWork engagementStressorAvoidance copingDevaluationGeneral Business Management and AccountingSpillover effectNegative relationshipManagement of Technology and InnovationWell-beingPsychologySocial psychologyta515Economic and Industrial Democracy
researchProduct

The role of experience in work and learning among design engineers

2004

Taking an approach to learning in the workplace as a phenomenon situated and accumulated in the course of work activities and everyday practice, the purpose of this study was to investigate how workers (development engineers and designers) themselves perceive the role of experience in work and learning. The empirical material consists of interviews with 18 employees in two enterprises in Finland. Narrative analysis of the holistic core stories yielded four thematic categories. The categories indicate that learning from experience plays an essential part in coping and learning along with other people, in understanding holistic work processes and in creating a personal perception of one’s wor…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic relationsAtmosphere (architecture and spatial design)Experiential learningEducationNarrative inquiryWork (electrical)PhenomenonPerceptionSituatedbusinessPsychologymedia_commonInternational Journal of Training and Development
researchProduct

Media coverage about organisations in critical situations – Analysing the impact on employees.

2013

Purpose– This research aims to investigate how critical media coverage of an organisation affects its employees. The authors expect the effects to be similar to the way media coverage about an individual would affect this person, termed “reciprocal effects”.Design/methodology/approach– Drawing on a framework for the analysis of reciprocal effects of mass media by Kepplinger and qualitative interviews among employees of 14 different organisations undergoing a crisis, the authors develop an employee-model of reciprocal effects for the context of organisational crises.Findings– This qualitative research shows that employees are affected by media coverage on a critical issue about their employe…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectShameMedia coverageLearned helplessnessInterpersonal communicationPublic relationsIndustrial relationsSociologybusinessSocial psychologyReciprocalmedia_commonQualitative researchMass media
researchProduct

Job preservation efforts: when does job insecurity prompt performance?

2020

PurposeWhile job insecurity generally impedes performance, there may be circumstances under which it can prompt performance. The purpose of this paper is to examine a specific situation (reorganization) in which job insecurity may prompt task and contextual performance. The authors propose that performance can represent a job preservation strategy, to which employees may only resort when supervisor-issued ratings of performance are instrumental toward securing one’s job. The authors hypothesize that because of this instrumentality, job insecurity will motivate employees’ performance only when they have low intrinsic motivation, and only when they perceive high distributive justice.Design/me…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)media_common.quotation_subject:PSICOLOGÍA [UNESCO]050109 social psychologyUNESCO::PSICOLOGÍAOriginality0502 economics and business0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesDistributive justiceOrganizational Citizenship Behaviourmedia_commonOrganizational citizenship behaviorContextual performanceWork MotivationJob insecurityComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION05 social sciencesSurvey researchTreball Aspectes psicològicsOrganiational JusticeProcediment del treballJob Perservation EffortsCausal inferencePsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)
researchProduct

One after the other

2017

To date, the study of psychological contracts has primarily centred on the question how retrospective evaluations of the psychological contract impact employee attitudes and behaviours, and/or focus on individual coping processes in explaining responses to breached or overfulfilled obligations. In this study, we aim to assess the extent to which sequences of breached and overfulfilled obligations impact job satisfaction and citizenship behaviour intentions. By integrating psychological contract research and theories on cognitive information processing, we formulate competing hypotheses on how sequences of breached and/or overfulfilled obligations lead to patterns of job satisfaction and cit…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementCoping (psychology)media_common.quotation_subjectCognitive Information Processing05 social sciences050109 social psychologyPsychological contractVignette0502 economics and business0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesJob satisfactionPsychologyBayesian hypothesis testingCitizenshipSocial psychology050203 business & managementApplied Psychologymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
researchProduct