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Table 1 Descriptive Statistics of Daily Meeting Load and Well-Being

in Meetings and More Meetings: The Relationship Between Meeting Load and the Daily Well-Being of Employees
by Alexandra Luong, Steven G. Rogelberg, Ra Luong, Department Of Psychology, Peter Warr
"... In PAGE 5: ... Most meetings were face-to-face interactions. Descriptive statistics for daily meeting load are shown in Table1 . Participants had, on average, three meetings per day.... In PAGE 5: ...94 min (slightly over two and a half hours). Descriptive statistics for daily well-being are also shown in Table1 . Table 2 displays the intercorrelations among the depen- dent variables at the aggregate level, in which each observation is the mean across the 5 days for each individual.... ..."

Table 1: Coefficient values used in the calculation of the well-being value. These values were selected to reflect the relative importance of the different influences.

in Learning Behavior-Selection by Emotions and Cognition in a Multi-Goal Robot Task
by Sandra Clara Gadanho 2003
"... In PAGE 7: ... The well-being value depends on the domain-dependent set of homeostatic variables (H ) in different ways: their state, their transitions and their predictions. These different influences are weighted by their respective coefficients (cs, ct(sh) and cp), presented in Table1 . Note that the value of the transition coefficient (ct(sh)) depends on the recent states (sh) of each homeostatic variable.... ..."
Cited by 10

Table 1: Coefficient values used in the calculation of the well-being value. These values were selected to reflect the relative importance of the different influences.

in Learning Behavior-Selection by Emotions and Cognition in a Multi-Goal Robot Task
by Sandra Clara Gadanho, Peter Dayan 2003
"... In PAGE 7: ... The well-being value depends on the domain-dependent set of homeostatic variables (H ) in different ways: their state, their transitions and their predictions. These different influences are weighted by their respective coefficients (cs, ct(sh) and cp), presented in Table1 . Note that the value of the transition coefficient (ct(sh)) depends on the recent states (sh) of each homeostatic variable.... ..."
Cited by 10

Table 18. Mental Well-being Equations, 1996(workers only)

in Is the UK Moving Up the International Wellbeing Rankings?
by David G. Blanchflower, Andrew J. Oswald
"... In PAGE 24: ... Hence a positive coefficient is to be interpreted as showing the variable is associated with higher stress and lower mental well-being. According to the GHQ mental stress equations of Table18 , stress levels increase in age, are higher for females than males, and are strongly increased by the number of hours worked and job insecurity, and eased by a healthy financial situation. Based on the semi-GHQ score in the second column of Table 18 (where the European-15 mean GHQ = 0.... In PAGE 24: ... According to the GHQ mental stress equations of Table 18, stress levels increase in age, are higher for females than males, and are strongly increased by the number of hours worked and job insecurity, and eased by a healthy financial situation. Based on the semi-GHQ score in the second column of Table18 (where the European-15 mean GHQ = 0.95, meaning stressed on approximately one category on average), overall stress levels appear to be particularly low in Southern Ireland and especially high in Italy.... In PAGE 24: ...95, meaning stressed on approximately one category on average), overall stress levels appear to be particularly low in Southern Ireland and especially high in Italy. The third column of Table18 reports the results of estimating a probit equation where the dependent variable is set to one if the worker replied positively when asked if he or she worked under a great deal of pressure . Perceived pressure appears to be greater in the private than in the public sector, and for those... ..."

TABLE 8 HOUSEHOLD WELL BEING

in Linking Community Resources To Family Survival Strategies
by Ron Shaffer Professor, Sandi Wraith, Ron Shaffer, Ron Shaffer, Ann Ziebarth, Ann Ziebarth, Jennifer Farnham, Jennifer Farnham, I Wraith, Leann Tigges, Leann Tigges
"... In PAGE 21: ...HOUSEHOLD WELL BEING TABLE8 REPORTS three different indicators of household income. The three indicators are 1) yes, we have money left over after taking care of necessities; 2) we expect to be financially better off next year; and 3) this years income is better than last.... ..."

Table 1: The Impact of Unemployment on Well-Being and Alienation

in Originally published in
by Peter Saunders 2000
"... In PAGE 23: ... 20 contributes adversely to the deprivation and exclusion of Indigenous Australians (Hunter and Taylor, 2002). Table1 summarises some of the attitudinal effects of unemployment through a comparison with those held by employed Australians. It is clear that there are significant variations in attitudes and beliefs according to labour force status, with the unemployed showing less contentment, poorer health, a greater sense of disillusionment with economic and social trends and a far more pessimistic assessment of labour market prospects.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 9: Components of well-being and deprivations among persons

in MEASURING WELL-BEING IN THE FUNCTIONING SPACE
by Andrea Brandolini, Giovanni D’Alessio 2000

TABLE 1. WELL-BEING, INCOME AND INEQUALITY: ORDERED PROBITS

in INEQUALITY-AVERSION AND INCOME MOBILITY: A DIRECT TEST
by Andrew E. Clark, Andrew E. Clark 2003

TABLE 3. WELL-BEING, INEQUALITY AND INCOME MOBILITY:

in INEQUALITY-AVERSION AND INCOME MOBILITY: A DIRECT TEST
by Andrew E. Clark, Andrew E. Clark 2003

Table 5: Selected Indicators of Households Well-being

in Local Institutions, Poverty and Household Welfare in Bolivia
by Christiaan Grootaert, Deepa Narayan
"... In PAGE 14: ... Household welfare is not measured only by the level of expenditures but also by various other dimensions. Table5 contains several dimensions which can be calculated from the LLI data set. Specifically, we show indicators relating to how often the ... In PAGE 15: ... The data are shown by quintiles which rank households based on household expenditure per capita. Table5 suggests that 25% of sample households indicate that they often go hungry in the course of the year. However, the rate is much higher (38.... ..."
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