Pubblicazioni

Eyes on the road, hands upon the wheel? Reciprocal dynamics between smartphone use while driving and job crafting.  (2022)

Autori:
Costantini, Arianna; Ceschi, Andrea; Oscar, Oviedo-Trespalacios
Titolo:
Eyes on the road, hands upon the wheel? Reciprocal dynamics between smartphone use while driving and job crafting.
Anno:
2022
Tipologia prodotto:
Articolo in Rivista
Tipologia ANVUR:
Articolo su rivista
Lingua:
Inglese
Referee:
No
Nome rivista:
TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART F: TRAFFIC PSYCHOLOGY AND BEHAVIOUR
ISSN Rivista:
1369-8478
Intervallo pagine:
129-142
Parole chiave:
Daily diary study; Driver behavior; Distraction; Job crafting; Mobile phone; Road user behavior; Smartphone
Breve descrizione dei contenuti:
Smartphones are essential tools for communications and information management in organizational settings. However, smartphone use is a risky behavior when used while driving to and from work. As work experiences have been found to influence risky commuting behaviors, we hypothesized that job crafting, i.e., a set of proactive work behaviors through which employees change their job demands and resources, influences and is influenced by risky commuting behaviors. We argued that employees' smartphone use during driving commutes is related to how employees proactively choose to transform their demands and resources at work. A quantitative diary study was designed to investigate the process linking smartphone use during driving commutes to and from work and job crafting. A sample of 128 office employees completed two short daily questionnaires for five consecutive workdays (N = 627 observations). Results from multilevel analyses showed that daily talking on the phone while driving to work was positively associated with the proactive optimization of job demands, while daily proactive pursuing of challenging stimuli at work (i.e., seeking challenges) was positively related to looking at the phone when employees drove back from work. Furthermore, on days when employees reduced their hindering job demands, they reported less frequent talking on the phone while driving back from work. Results provide practical implications for the prevention of distracted driving and other risky driving behaviors.
Id prodotto:
127996
Handle IRIS:
11562/1071946
ultima modifica:
23 febbraio 2023
Citazione bibliografica:
Costantini, Arianna; Ceschi, Andrea; Oscar, Oviedo-Trespalacios, Eyes on the road, hands upon the wheel? Reciprocal dynamics between smartphone use while driving and job crafting. «TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART F: TRAFFIC PSYCHOLOGY AND BEHAVIOUR»2022pp. 129-142

Consulta la scheda completa presente nel repository istituzionale della Ricerca di Ateneo IRIS

Progetti Collegati
Titolo Dipartimento Responsabili
Human Factor Dipartimento Scienze Umane Riccardo Sartori, Andrea Ceschi, Francesco Tommasi
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