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      Modeling the desire to telecommute: The importance of attitudinal factors in behavioral models

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      Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice
      Elsevier BV

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          The Estimation of Choice Probabilities from Choice Based Samples

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            A Model of Coping with Role Conflict: The Role Behavior of College Educated Women

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              Objective and subjective dimensions of travel impedance as determinants of commuting stress.

              The stressful characteristics of commuting constraints are conceptualized in terms of both physical and perceptual conditions of travel impedance. This study develops and operationalizes the concept of subjective impedance, as a complement to our previously developed concept of impedance as a physically defined condition of commuting stress. The stress impacts of high-impedance commuting were examined in a study of 79 employees of two companies in the follow-up testing of a longitudinal study. Subjective impedance was overlapping but not isomorphic with physical impedance, and these two dimensions have differential relationships with health and well-being outcomes. The physical impedance construct received further confirmation in validational analyses and in predicted effects on various illness measures and job satisfaction. The newly constructed subjective impedance index was significantly related to evening home mood, residential satisfaction, and chest pain. Job change was also influenced primarily by commuting satisfaction. The results are discussed within an ecological framework emphasizing interdomain transfer effects and situational moderators of commuting stress.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice
                Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice
                Elsevier BV
                09658564
                January 1997
                January 1997
                : 31
                : 1
                : 35-50
                Article
                10.1016/S0965-8564(96)00010-9
                d7a86f6e-101b-44f6-a3db-f84fe6ee38ac
                © 1997

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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