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The long arm of time pressure at work: Cognitive failure and commuting near-accidents
Authors:Achim Elfering  Simone Grebner  Fanny de Tribolet-Hardy
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , University of Bern , Berne , Switzerland achim.elfering@psy.unibe.ch;3. University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland, School of Applied Psychology , Olten , Switzerland;4. Department of Psychology , University of Bern , Berne , Switzerland
Abstract:This study tests whether cognitive failures mediate effects of work-related time pressure and time control on commuting accidents and near-accidents. Participants were 83 employees (56% female) who each commuted between their regular place of residence and place of work using vehicles. The Workplace Cognitive Failure Scale (WCFS) asked for the frequency of failure in memory function, failure in attention regulation, and failure in action execution. Time pressure and time control at work were assessed by the Instrument for Stress Oriented Task Analysis (ISTA). Commuting accidents in the last 12 months were reported by 10% of participants, and half of the sample reported commuting near-accidents in the last 4 weeks. Cognitive failure significantly mediated the influence of time pressure at work on near-accidents even when age, gender, neuroticism, conscientiousness, commuting duration, commuting distance, and time pressure during commuting were controlled for. Time control was negatively related to cognitive failure and neuroticism, but no association with commuting accidents or near-accidents was found. Time pressure at work is likely to increase cognitive load. Time pressure might, therefore, increase cognitive failures during work and also during commuting. Hence, time pressure at work can decrease commuting safety. The result suggests a reduction of time pressure at work should improve commuting safety.
Keywords:Cognitive failure  Commuting safety  Occupational stress
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