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      Interruptions to workflow: Their relationship with irritation and satisfaction with performance, and the mediating roles of time pressure and mental demands

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      Work & Stress
      Informa UK Limited

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            Compensatory control in the regulation of human performance under stress and high workload; a cognitive-energetical framework.

            This paper presents a cognitive-energetical framework for the analysis of effects of stress and high workload on human performance. Following Kahneman's (1973) model, regulation of goals and actions is assumed to require the operation of a compensatory control mechanism, which allocates resources dynamically. A two-level compensatory control model provides the basis for a mechanism of resource allocation through an effort monitor, sensitive to changes in the level of regulatory activity, coupled with a supervisory controller which can implement different modes of performance-cost trade-off. Performance may be protected under stress by the recruitment of further resources, but only at the expense of increased subjective effort, and behavioural and physiological costs. Alternatively, stability can be achieved by reducing performance goals, without further costs. Predictions about patterns of latent decrement under performance protection are evaluated in relation to the human performance literature. Even where no primary task decrements may be detected, performance may show disruption of subsidiary activities or the use of less efficient strategies, as well as increased psychophysiological activation, strain, and fatigue after-effects. Finally, the paper discusses implications of the model for the assessment of work strain, with a focus on individual-level patterns of regulatory activity and coping.
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              Testing Multilevel Mediation Using Hierarchical Linear Models

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Work & Stress
                Work & Stress
                Informa UK Limited
                0267-8373
                1464-5335
                January 2013
                January 2013
                : 27
                : 1
                : 43-63
                Article
                10.1080/02678373.2013.761783
                c4e481db-df69-472a-a27f-5ecf8fc71dad
                © 2013
                History

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