Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators

Exercising has shown to have positive spillover to the workplace where employees reported better work performance, physical health, and group dynamics. Nevertheless, the current literature has predominantly focus on the benefits of exercising, which types of exercises (i.e., individual exercise and...

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Main Author: Lau, Ruo Shin
Format: Thesis
Published: 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/2412/
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spelling my.sunway.eprints.24122023-09-29T03:39:27Z http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/2412/ Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators Lau, Ruo Shin BF Psychology HF Commerce Exercising has shown to have positive spillover to the workplace where employees reported better work performance, physical health, and group dynamics. Nevertheless, the current literature has predominantly focus on the benefits of exercising, which types of exercises (i.e., individual exercise and team exercise) were rarely distinguished, and the underlying process was yet unclear. Drawing on social learning and conservation of resource theory, the study proposed that team exercise, individual exercise, and no exercise spilled over onto employees’ work performance differently. Furthermore, physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion were proposed as mediators for the relationship between exercise and work performance. Participants consisted of 277 working adults (48% females; 52% males) belonging to three groups: team exercise (n= 74), individual exercise (n= 81), and no exercise (n= 122). Participants’ self-reported data were collected via online survey. Hayes’s PROCESS was used to test the proposed mediation model which workplace communication competency emerged as a significant positive mediator for team exercise. This suggests positive spillover of communication skills and knowledge from team exercise to employee’s work performance. Besides that, team exercise was most likely to improve employee’s work performance, physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion. Theoretical and practical implications of current findings were discussed in which may facilitate employees’ work performance by exercising. 2021-06-30 Thesis NonPeerReviewed Lau, Ruo Shin (2021) Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators. Masters thesis, Sunway University.
institution Sunway University
building Sunway Campus Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Sunway University
content_source Sunway Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/
topic BF Psychology
HF Commerce
spellingShingle BF Psychology
HF Commerce
Lau, Ruo Shin
Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
description Exercising has shown to have positive spillover to the workplace where employees reported better work performance, physical health, and group dynamics. Nevertheless, the current literature has predominantly focus on the benefits of exercising, which types of exercises (i.e., individual exercise and team exercise) were rarely distinguished, and the underlying process was yet unclear. Drawing on social learning and conservation of resource theory, the study proposed that team exercise, individual exercise, and no exercise spilled over onto employees’ work performance differently. Furthermore, physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion were proposed as mediators for the relationship between exercise and work performance. Participants consisted of 277 working adults (48% females; 52% males) belonging to three groups: team exercise (n= 74), individual exercise (n= 81), and no exercise (n= 122). Participants’ self-reported data were collected via online survey. Hayes’s PROCESS was used to test the proposed mediation model which workplace communication competency emerged as a significant positive mediator for team exercise. This suggests positive spillover of communication skills and knowledge from team exercise to employee’s work performance. Besides that, team exercise was most likely to improve employee’s work performance, physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion. Theoretical and practical implications of current findings were discussed in which may facilitate employees’ work performance by exercising.
format Thesis
author Lau, Ruo Shin
author_facet Lau, Ruo Shin
author_sort Lau, Ruo Shin
title Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
title_short Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
title_full Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
title_fullStr Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
title_full_unstemmed Exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
title_sort exercise and work performance: physical health, workplace communication competency, and perceived team cohesion as mediators
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/2412/
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