The independent relationships of objective and subjective workload with couples' mood


Authors/Editors


Research Areas


Publication Details

Output typeJournal article

Author listvan Emmetik IH, Jawahar IM

PublisherSAGE Publications

Publication year2006

JournalHuman Relations (0018-7267)

Volume number59

Issue number10

Start page1371

End page1392

Number of pages22

ISSN0018-7267

eISSN1741-282X

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


Unpaywall Data

Open access statusgreen

Full text URLhttps://dspace.library.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/1874/19011/Enl%202006%20%3d%20Artikel%20-%20HR%20-%20Van%20Emmerik%20and%20Jawahar%20-%20The%20independent%20relationships%20of%20objective%20and%20subjective%20workload%20with%20couples%27%20mood.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y


Abstract

Mood signifies general well-being and a positive mood benefits self, one's spouse and the family unit. Dual-earner couples are particularly susceptible to spillover and crossover of mood. A lack of studies on the relationship between workload and mood and the repeated calls for more couple-level research served as the primary impetus for this study. Using data from 629 couples, we examined the relationship between objective (i.e. hours of paid work) and subjective (i.e. time pressure) workload on 1) one's own (positive and negative) mood, 2) spouse's mood, and 3) mood at the couple level. Results of two-level regression analyses indicated that subjective workload was positively related to negative mood. In contrast, objective workload was related to decreased negative mood and to increased positive mood. In addition to support for spillover effect, results supported one crossover effect, such that wives of husbands who devote more hours to paid work reported higher levels of negative mood, even as the husbands themselves reported lower levels of negative mood. Implications of results are discussed.


Keywords

couplesmoodworkload


Documents

No matching items found.


Last updated on 2025-01-07 at 00:50