Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors
Workers face several stressors at work and can experience strain outcomes as a result. Recovery is one mechanism for managing stressors and reducing strain outcomes. Previous studies have focused on recovery experiences in terms of outcomes such as work performance and well-being, while specific rec...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1394442020-05-19T08:32:27Z Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors Choo, Julian Jun Hui Eunae Cho School of Social Sciences eunaecho@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Workers face several stressors at work and can experience strain outcomes as a result. Recovery is one mechanism for managing stressors and reducing strain outcomes. Previous studies have focused on recovery experiences in terms of outcomes such as work performance and well-being, while specific recovery activities that lead to recovery have rarely been examined. Thus, this study investigates the family meal as one potential activity in relation to psychological detachment (the recovery experience of not thinking about work, and the strongest in predicting well-being). Survey data was collected from 50 workers, then analyzed using multiple regression and moderated hierarchical regression. Results suggest that family meal frequency is a moderator between work hours and psychological detachment, and that family meal commitment is a moderator between family meal frequency and psychological detachment. Specifically, workers with lower family meal frequency experience a decrease in psychological detachment as work hours increased, and family meal frequency exhibited a positive relationship with psychological detachment for those who have higher family meal commitment. In sum, the study contributes to the recovery literature by demonstrating the family meal as a recovery activity. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2020-05-19T08:32:27Z 2020-05-19T08:32:27Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139444 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Social sciences::Psychology Choo, Julian Jun Hui Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
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Workers face several stressors at work and can experience strain outcomes as a result. Recovery is one mechanism for managing stressors and reducing strain outcomes. Previous studies have focused on recovery experiences in terms of outcomes such as work performance and well-being, while specific recovery activities that lead to recovery have rarely been examined. Thus, this study investigates the family meal as one potential activity in relation to psychological detachment (the recovery experience of not thinking about work, and the strongest in predicting well-being). Survey data was collected from 50 workers, then analyzed using multiple regression and moderated hierarchical regression. Results suggest that family meal frequency is a moderator between work hours and psychological detachment, and that family meal commitment is a moderator between family meal frequency and psychological detachment. Specifically, workers with lower family meal frequency experience a decrease in psychological detachment as work hours increased, and family meal frequency exhibited a positive relationship with psychological detachment for those who have higher family meal commitment. In sum, the study contributes to the recovery literature by demonstrating the family meal as a recovery activity. |
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Eunae Cho |
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Eunae Cho Choo, Julian Jun Hui |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Choo, Julian Jun Hui |
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Choo, Julian Jun Hui |
title |
Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
title_short |
Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
title_full |
Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
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Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
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Family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
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family meal as a recovery activity : the moderating role of contextual factors |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139444 |
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1681056629292793856 |