Effects of control over office workspace on perceptions of the work environment and work outcomes

Increasingly, workplaces must support rapid technology development and implementation, dynamic organizational changes, and concomitant employee needs for balancing privacy, collaboration and other work processes. Open plan offices have been positioned as providing at least partial solutions to many...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental psychology 2005-09, Vol.25 (3), p.323-333
Hauptverfasser: Lee, So Young, Brand, Jay L.
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container_title Journal of environmental psychology
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creator Lee, So Young
Brand, Jay L.
description Increasingly, workplaces must support rapid technology development and implementation, dynamic organizational changes, and concomitant employee needs for balancing privacy, collaboration and other work processes. Open plan offices have been positioned as providing at least partial solutions to many of these historic and contemporary challenges. However, many problems with open offices have been documented, such as noise, lack of privacy and other distractions; yet enclosed, private offices hamper communication, teamwork and flexible use of space as well. In an effort to elucidate workers’ perceptions of some of these trade-offs, this study examined the effects of distractions, flexible use of workspace and personal control over the work environment on perceived job performance, job satisfaction, group cohesiveness, and inclinations to work alone or in an enclosed space and their interrelationships. The proposed path model was tested by LISREL 8.54. All fit indices for the model remained within acceptable levels. The results showed that more personal control over the physical workspace (e.g., adjustment) and easy access to meeting places led to higher perceived group cohesiveness and job satisfaction. Contrary to expectation, the results indicated that distractions may have little influence on self-rated performance.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Distraction
Distractors
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Group cohesiveness
Job performance
Job satisfaction
Motivation. Job satisfaction. Attitude
Occupational psychology
Office workspace
Perceived performance
Personal control
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Work condition. Job performance. Stress
Work environment
title Effects of control over office workspace on perceptions of the work environment and work outcomes
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