Regulatory job stressors and their within-person relationships with ego depletion: The roles of state anxiety, self-control effort, and job autonomy

Roman Prem, Bettina Kubicek, Stefan Diestel, Christian Korunka

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelBegutachtung

93 Zitate (Scopus)

Abstract

Our research aimed at disentangling the underlying processes of the adverse relationship between regulatory job stressors and ego depletion. Specifically, we analyzed whether state anxiety and self-control effort would mediate the within-person relationships of time pressure, planning and decision-making, and emotional dissonance with ego depletion. In addition, we also tested potential attenuating effects of situational job autonomy on the adverse effects of regulatory job stressors on state anxiety, self-control effort, and ego depletion. Based on an experience sampling design, we gathered a sample of 97 eldercare workers who provided data on 721 experience-sampling occasions. Multilevel moderated serial mediation analyses revealed that time pressure and emotional dissonance, but not planning and decision-making, exerted significant serial indirect effects on ego depletion via state anxiety and self-control effort. Finally, we found conditional serial indirect effects of all three regulatory job stressors on ego depletion as a function of job autonomy. Theoretical implications for scholarly understanding of coping with regulatory job stressors are discussed.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)22-32
Seitenumfang11
FachzeitschriftJournal of Vocational Behavior
Jahrgang92
Ausgabenummer1
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 1 Feb. 2016

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