Publications by authors named "Kuo-Tai Cheng"

Covid-19 posed stress to the employees in the Public Utility Sector (PUS). Although employees adopted various stress-coping strategies, the actual coping-efficacy remained unclear and hence the current research followed. Research data were gathered from 678 employees of the four PUS companies, including Power, Water, Railways, and Petroleum in TAIWAN (anonymous surveys with ethical-guideline applied).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates carbon emissions in the Yangtze River Economic Belt, focusing on the efficiency of carbon emissions and their spatial organization.
  • It finds that while carbon emission efficiency has improved, disparities remain among cities, indicating a certain hierarchy and differentiation at the provincial level.
  • Critical groups in the carbon emission efficiency network are identified, and the paper offers policy recommendations for enhancing efficiency through technology and market systems.
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Complaints regarding understaffing are common in the workplace, and research has begun to document some of the potential ill effects that can result from understaffing conditions. Despite evidence that understaffing is a relatively prevalent and consequential stressor, research has yet to explore how work groups cope with this stressor and the efficacy of their coping strategies in mitigating poor group performance and burnout. The present study examines these questions by exploring both potential mediating and moderating coping effects using a sample of 96 work groups from four technology organizations.

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