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Work & Stress
An International Journal of Work, Health & Organisations
Volume 18, 2004 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

The distinction between work pace and working hours in the measurement of quantitative demands at work

Pages 305-322 | Published online: 22 Aug 2006

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (12)

Bettina Kubicek, Lars Uhlig, Ute R. Hülsheger, Christian Korunka & Roman Prem. (2023) Are all challenge stressors beneficial for learning? A meta-analytical assessment of differential effects of workload and cognitive demands. Work & Stress 37:3, pages 269-298.
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Peter Barck-Holst, Åsa Nilsonne, Torbjörn Åkerstedt & Carina Hellgren. (2022) Reduced working hours and work-life balance. Nordic Social Work Research 12:4, pages 450-463.
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Inmaculada Silla & Nuria Gamero. (2014) Shared time pressure at work and its health-related outcomes: Job satisfaction as a mediator. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology 23:3, pages 405-418.
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BongKyoo Choi, Alicia Kurowski, Meg Bond, Dean Baker, Els Clays, Dirk De Bacquer & Laura Punnett. (2012) Occupation-differential construct validity of the Job Content Questionnaire (JCQ) psychological job demands scale with physical job demands items: a mixed methods research. Ergonomics 55:4, pages 425-439.
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Ulrich Stoetzer, Gunnel Ahlberg, Peter Bergman, Lennart Hallsten & Ingvar Lundberg. (2009) Working conditions predicting interpersonal relationship problems at work. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology 18:4, pages 424-441.
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JenniferS. Tucker, RobertR. Sinclair, CynthiaD. Mohr, AmyB. Adler, JeffreyL. Thomas & AngelaD. Salvi. (2008) A temporal investigation of the direct, interactive, and reverse relations between demand and control and affective strain. Work & Stress 22:2, pages 81-95.
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Reiner Rugulies, KarlB. Christensen, Marianne Borritz, Ebbe Villadsen, Ute Bültmann & TageS. Kristensen. (2007) The contribution of the psychosocial work environment to sickness absence in human service workers: Results of a 3-year follow-up study. Work & Stress 21:4, pages 293-311.
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TageS. Kristensen, Marianne Borritz, Ebbe Villadsen & KarlB. Christensen. (2005) The Copenhagen Burnout Inventory: A new tool for the assessment of burnout. Work & Stress 19:3, pages 192-207.
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Aslaug Mikkelsen, Torvald Øgaard & Paul Landsbergis. (2005) The effects of new dimensions of psychological job demands and job control on active learning and occupational health. Work & Stress 19:2, pages 153-175.
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Yuan Yang, Xin’ge Tan, Jian Gao & Zi’ning Liu. Vocal fatigue of kindergarten teachers in China and its influential factors: a chain mediating model. European Early Childhood Education Research Journal 0:0, pages 1-17.
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Articles from other publishers (96)

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Wonil Lee, Jia-Hua Lin, Ninica Howard & Stephen Bao. (2023) Physiological responses, trunk posture, and work pace in commercial building cleaning in Washington State: An observational field study. Journal of Safety Research 86, pages 107-117.
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Sebastian Gerbeth & Regina H. Mulder. (2023) Team behaviors as antecedents for team members’ work engagement in interdisciplinary health care teams. Frontiers in Psychology 14.
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Andrew Parker, Christian Waldstrøm & Neha Parikh Shah. (2022) The Coevolution of Emotional Job Demands and Work-Based Social Ties and Their Effect on Performance. Journal of Management 49:5, pages 1601-1632.
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Lena Zahlquist, Jørn Hetland, Guy Notelaers, Michael Rosander & Ståle Valvatne Einarsen. (2023) When the Going Gets Tough and the Environment Is Rough: The Role of Departmental Level Hostile Work Climate in the Relationships between Job Stressors and Workplace Bullying. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20:5, pages 4464.
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Matthew L Stevens, Kristina Karstad, Leticia Bergamin Januario, Svend Erik Mathiassen, Reiner Rugulies, David M Hallman & Andreas Holtermann. (2022) Nursing Home, Ward and Worker Level Determinants of Perceived Quantitative Work Demands: A Multi-Level Cross-Sectional Analysis in Eldercare. Annals of Work Exposures and Health 66:8, pages 1033-1043.
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