5 results match your criteria: "Guangdong Women's Polytechnic College.[Affiliation]"
Background: Emergency nurses who thrive at work experience positive emotions that help reduce burnout and thus enhance career calling. However, few studies have focused on the relationships among thriving at work, career calling, and moral distress among emergency nurses.
Objectives: To investigate the relationships among thriving at work, career calling, and moral distress and to explore the mediating role of career calling in the relationship between thriving at work and moral distress among emergency nurses.
J Affect Disord
January 2023
Center for Brain and Cognitive Sciences, School of Education, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou, China; Experimental Center (Education) of National Intelligent Society Governance - Student Development Center under Intelligent Education, Guangzhou, China. Electronic address:
Background: The general aggression model has shown that both individual and situational factors can predict aggression. However, past research has tended to discuss these two factors separately, which might lead to inconsistency. This study addresses this gap by examining the importance of each predictor of aggression in a Chinese compulsory drug treatment population and further explores the predictors of aggression in various substance use disorder populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
December 2021
School of Business Administration, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China.
The negative interpersonal interaction between customers and platform gig workers has become a problem for platform owners and government. This study investigates the role of negative customer treatment in the context of gig work and its impact on gig workers' sabotage behavior. A questionnaire survey approach was used in the study, collected three-wave survey data from 258 Chinese gig workers including food-deliver platform workers and app-based ride-hailing drivers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIran J Public Health
March 2016
Guangdong Medical University, Dongguan, China.
Psychol Rep
February 2015
1 South China Normal University, Guangdong Women's Polytechnic College.
The present study was designed to investigate bilingual memory representations in less fluent Chinese-English bilinguals and the effect of word familiarity on bilingual memory representations with a translation priming paradigm and the event-related potential (ERP) technique. Three factors (translation order, word familiarity, and repetition status) were manipulated in this study, and the major dependent variable was the magnitude of the N400 repetition effect, which is related to semantic expectation and is an important physiological index of language processing. The results confirmed the asymmetry in bilingual memory with stronger L2-LI links compared to L1-L2 links in less fluent Chinese-English bilinguals, and that word familiarity was an important factor in the memory representations of these less fluent bilinguals.
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