Previous meta-analytic findings have provided ambiguous evidence on job control as a buffering moderator of the adverse impact of job demands on psychological well-being. To disentangle these mixed findings, we examine the moderating effect of job control on the adverse effects of quantitative workload and emotional dissonance as distinct work-related demands on emotional exhaustion over time. Drawing on the job demands-control model, the limited strength model of self-control, and the matching principle we propose that job control can facilitate coping with work-related demands but at the same time may also require employees’ self-control. Consequently, we argue that job control buffers the adverse effects of quantitative workload while it...
The Job Demand-Control model postulates that job control attenuates the effects of job demands on he...
Quantitative job insecurity, relating to threat of job loss, has received considerable research atte...
Background: There have been few empirical studies to explain the individual differences in and the u...
Previous meta-analytic findings have provided ambiguous evidence on job control as a buffering moder...
Previous meta-analytic findings have provided ambiguous evidence on job control as a buffering moder...
© 2014 The British Psychological Society. This study aims to explain the reciprocal relationship bet...
全文[[abstract]]This study attempted to investigate the role of emotional exhaustion as a mediator on ...
Job control may be defined as the latitude to make decisions and the freedom to select the most appr...
Does job control act as a stress-buffer when employees' type and level of work self-determination is...
Does job control act as a stress-buffer when employees' type and level of work self-determination is...
This study examined the dynamic interplay among job demands, job control, and work self-determinatio...
The aim of this study is to examine the individual differences inherent to the use of job control in...
In the present study, the relation between emotional job demands and emotional exhaustion was invest...
In the present study, the relation between emotional job demands and emotional exhaustion was invest...
The authors of this study examined the relation between job demands and psychological detachment fro...
The Job Demand-Control model postulates that job control attenuates the effects of job demands on he...
Quantitative job insecurity, relating to threat of job loss, has received considerable research atte...
Background: There have been few empirical studies to explain the individual differences in and the u...
Previous meta-analytic findings have provided ambiguous evidence on job control as a buffering moder...
Previous meta-analytic findings have provided ambiguous evidence on job control as a buffering moder...
© 2014 The British Psychological Society. This study aims to explain the reciprocal relationship bet...
全文[[abstract]]This study attempted to investigate the role of emotional exhaustion as a mediator on ...
Job control may be defined as the latitude to make decisions and the freedom to select the most appr...
Does job control act as a stress-buffer when employees' type and level of work self-determination is...
Does job control act as a stress-buffer when employees' type and level of work self-determination is...
This study examined the dynamic interplay among job demands, job control, and work self-determinatio...
The aim of this study is to examine the individual differences inherent to the use of job control in...
In the present study, the relation between emotional job demands and emotional exhaustion was invest...
In the present study, the relation between emotional job demands and emotional exhaustion was invest...
The authors of this study examined the relation between job demands and psychological detachment fro...
The Job Demand-Control model postulates that job control attenuates the effects of job demands on he...
Quantitative job insecurity, relating to threat of job loss, has received considerable research atte...
Background: There have been few empirical studies to explain the individual differences in and the u...