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Improving a company's total performance through time : an analysis of the attitudinal and behavioral impact of human resource information on productivity /Sexton, Donald L. January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Effects of intrinsic and extrinsic reinforcements on job performance and satisfaction /Harlan, Anne January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparison of human performance on computer text editing tasks using windowed and non-windowed strategiesO'Keefe, Timothy J. January 1987 (has links)
Software packages which use windows have become increasingly popular in the last two years. Their popularity derives from the belief that windows will improve productivity by decreasing task completion time. However, two studies (Silver, 1985 and Davies, Bury and Darnell, 1985) have found this not to be the case. In fact, one of the studies (Davies at al., 1985) found that task completion time was increased when using windows. It is thought that performance using window systems is a function of the number of responses required to be executed as well as the amount of information which must be found and used to complete a task. The purpose of the present study was to determine under what conditions, in terms of memory load and task complexity, performance using windows and non-window strategies differed.
Forty-eight subjects were placed in one of four environments and each performed six editing tasks which varied on complexity and memory load level. Human performance in one windowed environment was compared to three non-window strategies. These three strategies, note-taking, memorizing, or switching between files, were included to allow comparisons in terms of working memory and number and types of responses executed. The tasks required subjects to locate information from a supplementary file and type it into a main file. The three memory load levels which were used required subjects to find either 2, 4 or 8 pieces of information. The two complexity levels referred to the placement of needed information in the supplementary file; whether or not information was located in close proximity to other needed information.
Results indicated that it made little difference which system was used in the low memory load condition. However, as memory load increased, more subjects were found to make errors in the non-window conditions. More responses were executed in the Switch condition than in the Window or Memorization conditions in the high memory load condition. Mental workload was also found to be higher in the Memorization and Switch conditions than in the Window and Notes conditions as memory load increased. Nevertheless, there was no significant interaction for task completion times between Memory Load and Environment. This was thought to be due to a failure to adequately load working memory as well as a failure of a test of verbal and spatial ability to account for individual differences.
It was concluded that the benefits of windows are not apparent until one°s working memory capacity is exceeded. As memory load increases beyond this point, it is thought that memorization will quickly become an inefficient strategy due to limitations of memory capacity. As memory load continues to increase, a switching strategy should become inefficient due to limitations of both memory and response capacities. A strategy of note taking should not become inefficient until a large memory load is placed upon the user. This is because note taking is a well learned uncomplicated response. The benefits of windows include a reduction in the number of responses, errors, and mental workload due to their ability to reduce the amount of mental resources required by providing the user with a very efficient and accurate memory aid. / Ph. D.
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Human energy supplementation and worker productivity : a case study of sugarcane cutters in GuatemalaImmink, Maarten D. C January 1978 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1978. / Bibliography: leaves 296-301. / Microfiche. / xxv, 301 leaves ill. 28 cm
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The political economy of exploitation a comparative study of the rate of surplus value in Japan and the United States, 1958-1980 /Kalmans, Rebecca. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--New School for Social Research, 1992. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 272-282).
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The supplemental effects of feedback on work performance under a monetary incentive systemAgnew, Judy Lynn 26 June 2018 (has links)
Individual monetary incentive systems usually include performance feedback as part of the intervention package.
However, there is no experimental evidence to suggest that
feedback has any functional effect on work performance above and
beyond the effects of the incentive systems. It may be that incentive
systems have such powerful effects on work behavior that the
additional contingencies provided by a feedback system are
unnecessary. The present laboratory study investigated the
supplemental effects of feedback on work performance under a
monetary incentive system. Four subjects were hired to work seven
hours a day for four and a half weeks. The experimental work task
was a simulation of a proof operator’s job at a bank and involved
typing dollar values of “checks” into a computer. Subjects were
paid a base salary per session plus incentive money for
performance above a criterion. The main dependent variable was
the number of correctly completed checks per session. The amount
of time off task and rate of responding were also investigated.
Subjects were exposed to an ABA experimental design involving;
(A) the monetary incentive system without performance feedback,
(B) the incentive system with performance feedback, and (A) return
to the incentive system without performance feedback. The
introduction of feedback resulted in small to moderate performance
improvements in two of the four subjects. Possible reasons for the
small and inconsistent effects were explored with special attention
paid to the functional role of feedback and monetary incentives. It
was proposed that small amounts of incentive money and
performance feedback may not improve productivity in the absence
of other stimulus events inherent in real organizational settings,
such as the possibility for pay raises, promotions, and/or the threat
of being fired. These variables may have function-altering effects
on incentive money and performance feedback. Future laboratory
simulations might experimentally manipulate these variables to
further investigate the efficacy of monetary incentive systems. / Graduate
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Winsdeelskemas : 'n alternatiewe oplossing vir onrealistiese looneiseJansen van Rensburg, Adriaan 18 February 2014 (has links)
M.Com. (Business Management) / A higher standard of living is one of the greatest needs of the South African population. Labour movements believe that a higher standard of living can actually be achieved by paying higher wages. Unfortunately higher wages are demanded and paid at the expense of productivity which is a vital ingredient for economic growth and ultimately economic survival. Employers within the South African economy can address the low productivity ratios through the implementation of performance related schemes. Gain sharing is one of many interventions management can implement to achieve greater performance through labour. By implementing a gain sharing scheme management is able to relate pay to performance and address efficiency ratios which ultimately affects the competitiveness of South African goods and services against world competitors.
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Municipal layoffs in Southern California: Should seniority outweigh productivity?Ousley, Timothy Paul 01 January 1997 (has links)
This study consists of literature research providing background and basic knowledge on layoff-related issues, and analysis of data obtained through a survey of human resources professionals in 30 mid-size Southern California cities. The survey provided information on the layoff experiences of respondents' cities and the current state of affairs pertaining to layoff policies, procedures and perceptions.
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Labor standards and efficiency estimation of farms in the Kansas Farm Management AssociationHolland, Cody January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Agricultural Economics / Michael Langemeier / The objectives of this thesis are to examine the labor requirements of Kansas crop and livestock enterprises and farms and the connection between labor efficiency and productivity, and other important farm characteristics including farm size and type. The derived labor requirements are compared to current KFMA labor requirements.
Enterprise summary reports and a five year whole-farm panel data set from 1,016 Kansas Farm Management Association (KFMA) farms are used in the analysis. Whole-farm labor requirements are computed with and without an adjustment for managerial and overhead cost. Individual regressions will be estimated to determine the effects that farm size, type, region and profit margin have on labor requirements.
The estimation results suggest that many of the current labor requirements still in use are accurate. However, there are enterprises with labor requirements that need updating. When the newly estimated requirements are compared to the previous KFMA requirements, 14 enterprises have lower labor requirements. Irrigated alfalfa showed the greatest decrease in labor required when compared to the previous standard, decreasing from 3.85 hrs/acre to 1.70 hrs/acre. Regression estimation results indicated that whole farm labor standards that were corrected for un-allocated overhead and managerial costs appear to be a more accurate representation of farm labor requirements.
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Labor productivity and employee incentive programs for commercial plants in the feed industryKantor, Richard Valiant January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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