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Junça Silva, A. & Lopes, C. (2023). Cognitive and affective predictors of occupational stress and job performance: The role of perceived organizational support and work engagement. Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences. 39 (4), 1013-1026
A. L. Silva and C. Lopes, "Cognitive and affective predictors of occupational stress and job performance: The role of perceived organizational support and work engagement", in Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences, vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 1013-1026, 2023
@article{silva2023_1732201785819, author = "Junça Silva, A. and Lopes, C. ", title = "Cognitive and affective predictors of occupational stress and job performance: The role of perceived organizational support and work engagement", journal = "Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences", year = "2023", volume = "39", number = "4", doi = "10.1108/JEAS-02-2021-0020", pages = "1013-1026", url = "https://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/issn/1026-4116" }
TY - JOUR TI - Cognitive and affective predictors of occupational stress and job performance: The role of perceived organizational support and work engagement T2 - Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences VL - 39 IS - 4 AU - Junça Silva, A. AU - Lopes, C. PY - 2023 SP - 1013-1026 SN - 1026-4116 DO - 10.1108/JEAS-02-2021-0020 UR - https://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/issn/1026-4116 AB - Purpose This study aimed to (1) analyze whether the perceived organizational support (POS) was a significant predictor of performance and stress and (2) explore the mediating role of engagement in these relations. Design/methodology/approach To test the hypotheses, the authors collected data with 200 working adults in a mandatory quarantine due to COVID-19 pandemic crisis. Findings The results showed that the POS contributed to increase engagement, and consequently, job performance. These relations also proved to be significant for stress, because when the POS increased, the work engagement also increased, and as a result decreased occupational stress. Research limitations/implications This study relied on a cross-sectional design. Therefore, future research should consider a daily design to replicate this study and analyze daily fluctuations. Overall, the authors can conclude that work engagement is an affective process through which POS decreases stress and increases performance. Originality/value This study tests the mediating effect of work engagement on the link between POS, stress and performance, and its theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed. ER -