Workaholism vs. Work Engagement: the Two Different Predictors of Future Well-being and Performance
暂无分享,去创建一个
Norito Kawakami | Wilmar B. Schaufeli | Akihito Shimazu | N. Kawakami | W. Schaufeli | A. Shimazu | Kimika Kamiyama | K. Kamiyama
[1] Itzhak Harpaz,et al. Beyond workaholism: Towards a general model of heavy work investment , 2012 .
[2] N. Kawakami,et al. Do workaholism and work engagement predict employee well-being and performance in opposite directions? , 2012, Industrial health.
[3] Toon W. Taris,et al. For Fun, Love, or Money: What Drives Workaholic, Engaged, and Burned‐Out Employees at Work? , 2012 .
[4] Kim S. Cameron,et al. The Oxford handbook of positive organizational scholarship , 2011 .
[5] A. Bakker,et al. Subjective Well-being in Organizations , 2011 .
[6] W. Schaufeli,et al. Workaholic and work engaged employees: dead ringers or worlds apart? , 2011, Journal of occupational health psychology.
[7] W. Schaufeli,et al. The push and pull of work: The differences between workaholism and work engagement , 2010 .
[8] Wilmar B. Schaufeli,et al. How changes in job demands and resources predict burnout, work engagement, and sickness absenteeism , 2009 .
[9] W. Schaufeli,et al. Being Driven to Work Excessively Hard , 2009 .
[10] W. Schaufeli,et al. Two-Factor Measure of Workaholism in The Netherlands and Being Driven to Work Excessively Hard : The Evaluation of a , 2009 .
[11] W. Schaufeli,et al. Is workaholism good or bad for employee well-being? The distinctiveness of workaholism and work engagement among Japanese employees. , 2009, Industrial health.
[12] Wilmar B. Schaufeli,et al. Work Engagement in Japan: Validation of the Japanese Version of the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale , 2008 .
[13] P. Smith,et al. Measuring change in psychosocial working conditions: methodological issues to consider when data are collected at baseline and one follow-up time point , 2008, Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
[14] W. Schaufeli,et al. Workaholism, Burnout, and Work Engagement: Three of a Kind or Three Different Kinds of Employee Well‐being? , 2008 .
[15] A. Kanai. Economic and Employment Conditions, Karoshi (Work to Death) and the Trend of Studies on Workaholism in Japan , 2006 .
[16] A. Bakker,et al. Doctor Jekyll or mr. Hyde? : On the differences between work engagement and workaholism , 2006 .
[17] A. Bakker,et al. Dr Jekyll or Mr Hyde ? On the di ff erences between work engagement and workaholism , 2006 .
[18] A. Bakker,et al. Job demands, job resources, and their relationship with burnout and engagement: a multi‐sample study , 2004 .
[19] J. George,et al. Understanding when bad moods foster creativity and good ones don't: the role of context and clarity of feelings. , 2002, The Journal of applied psychology.
[20] Dieter Zapf,et al. Social stressors at work, irritation, and depressive symptoms: Accounting for unmeasured third variables in a multi‐wave study , 2002 .
[21] A. Bakker,et al. The Measurement of Engagement and Burnout: A Two Sample Confirmatory Factor Analytic Approach , 2002 .
[22] T. Shimomitsu. Development of a novel brief job stress questionnaire , 2000 .
[23] M. Patterson,et al. It Takes Two to Tango. , 2003 .
[24] J. P. Wanous,et al. Overall job satisfaction: how good are single-item measures? , 1997, The Journal of applied psychology.
[25] L. J. Williams,et al. Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment as Predictors of Organizational Citizenship and In-Role Behaviors , 1991 .
[26] J. Dwyer,et al. Statistical Models for the Social and Behavioral Sciences , 1983 .