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Article
Open AccessDoes workplace telepressure get under the skin? Protocol for an ambulatory assessment study on wellbeing and health-related physiological, experiential, and behavioral concomitants of workplace telepressure
The daily working life of many employees requires the use of modern information and communication technology (ICT) devices such as computers, tablets, and smartphones. The double-edged nature of digital work e...
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Article
When Thoughts Have No Off Switch: The Cost of Telepressure and Message-based Communication behaviour within Boundary-crossing Contexts
Communication technology enables employees to be constantly connected at the cost of potentially blurring the boundaries between work and private life, which can be detrimental to their well-being. The present...
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Article
Open AccessCorrection to: Meaningful activities during COVID-19 lockdown and association with mental health in Belgian adults
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Article
Employee acceptability of wearable mental workload monitoring: exploring effects of framing the goal and context in corporate communication
Development of wearable mental workload (MWL) measures thrives, especially as leveraged by Industry 4.0. When employees object to wearing such gauges; however, research efforts might end up redundant. Based on se...
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Article
Open AccessMeaningful activities during COVID-19 lockdown and association with mental health in Belgian adults
The spread of COVID-19 has affected people’s daily lives, and the lockdown may have led to a disruption of daily activities and a decrease of people’s mental health.
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Article
Radiation Safety Performance is More than Simply Measuring Doses! Development of a Radiation Safety Rating Scale
Radiation safety performance is often evaluated using dose parameters measured by personal dosimeters and/or the C-arm, which provide limited information about teams’ actual radiation safety behaviors. This st...
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Article
You’ve got mail: does workplace telepressure relate to email communication?
Email is ubiquitous at the workplace. However, only few studies have empirically investigated the cognitive underpinning of computer-mediated business communication in general or work-related email behaviour i...
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Article
Open AccessEthical climate and intention to leave among critical care clinicians: an observational study in 68 intensive care units across Europe and the United States
Apart from organizational issues, quality of inter-professional collaboration during ethical decision-making may affect the intention to leave one’s job. To determine whether ethical climate is associated with...
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Article
The relation between social capital and burnout: a longitudinal study
Although social capital approach has showed its merits in predicting well-being and health in the working environment, studies examining the relation between social capital and burnout are scarce and limited t...
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Article
Understanding mental workload: from a clarifying concept analysis toward an implementable framework
The growing need for mental workload (MWL) optimization on the shop floor yields an impressive increase in theoretical and applied references to the concept of mental workload (Young et al. in Ergonomics 139:1...
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Article
Monetary Intelligence and Behavioral Economics: The Enron Effect—Love of Money, Corporate Ethical Values, Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), and Dishonesty Across 31 Geopolitical Entities
Monetary intelligence theory asserts that individuals apply their money attitude to frame critical concerns in the context and strategically select certain options to achieve financial goals and ultimate happi...
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Article
Monetary Intelligence and Behavioral Economics Across 32 Cultures: Good Apples Enjoy Good Quality of Life in Good Barrels
Monetary Intelligence theory asserts that individuals apply their money attitude to frame critical concerns in the context and strategically select certain options to achieve financial goals and ultimate happ...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Feedback Opportunities of Comparative Judgement: An Overview of Possible Features and Acceptance at Different User Levels
Given the increasing criticism on common assessment practices (e.g. assessments using rubrics), the method of Comparative Judgement (CJ) in assessments is on the rise due to its opportunities for reliable and va...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Comparative Judgment Within Online Assessment: Exploring Students Feedback Reactions
Nowadays, comparative judgment (CJ) emerged as an alternative method for assessing competences and performances (e.g. Pollitt, 2012). In this method, various assessors compare independently several representat...
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Chapter
Do National Levels of Individualism and Internal Locus of Control Relate to Well-Being: An Ecological Level International Study
There has been increasing interest in cross-national research that attempts to understand differences and similarities among employees from different cultures and nations. One of the basic issues of concern to...
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Article
Open AccessJob Resources and Matching Active Co** Styles as Moderators of the Longitudinal Relation Between Job Demands and Job Strain
Only in a few longitudinal studies it has been examined whether job resources should be matched to job demands to show stress-buffering effects of job resources (matching hypothesis), while there are no empiri...
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Article
Waiting for Godot: waiting in nuclear medicine
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Article
Patients' and personnel's perceptions of service quality and patient satisfaction in nuclear medicine
Patients' and personnel's perceptions of service quality were analysed to position nuclear medicine organisations in the service triangle theory of Haywood-Farmer [Int J Production and Operations Management 1988;...