scholarly journals Marching to Different Drum Beats: A Temporal Perspective on Coordinating Occupational Work

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eivor Oborn ◽  
Michael Barrett

In this paper, we contribute a temporal perspective on work coordination across collaborating occupations. Drawing on an ethnographic study of medical specialists—surgeons, pathologists, oncologists, and radiologists—we examine how their temporal orientations are shaped through the temporal structuring of occupational work. Our findings show that temporal structuring of occupational practices develop in relation to the contingencies and materialities of their work and that this shapes and is shaped by specialists’ temporal orientations. Further, we show that differences in occupations’ temporal orientations have important implications for coordinating work. More specifically, our study reveals how the domination of one temporal orientation can lead to recurrent strain, promoting a competitive trade-off between the different temporal orientations in guiding interaction. This temporal orientation domination is accompanied by a persistent emotional strain and potential conflict. Finally, we suggest that, alternatively, different temporal orientations can be resourced in solving coordination challenges through three interrelated mechanisms, namely juxtaposing, temporal working, and mutual adjusting. In so doing, we show how temporal resourcing can be productive in coordinating work.

Author(s):  
Sihwei Chen ◽  
Vera Hohaus ◽  
Rebecca Laturnus ◽  
Meagan Louie ◽  
Lisa Matthewson ◽  
...  

This chapter investigates modal-temporal interactions in twelve languages from seven families: English, Dutch, German, Mandarin, St’át’imcets, Northern Straits Salish, Halkomelem, Gitksan, Blackfoot, Ktunaxa, Atayal, and Javanese. We show that a generalized version of Condoravdi’s (2002) analysis has cross-linguistic applicability: a modal’s temporal perspective is given by an operator scoping above it (usually tense), while its temporal orientation is given by an operator scoping below it (usually aspect). We argue that a common core architecture can be retained, with language-specific differences in temporal and aspectual systems influencing the available interpretations in predictable ways. We also show that in almost all the languages we investigate, epistemic modals can have past temporal perspectives; this contributes to ongoing debate about the possibility of these readings.


2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Muro ◽  
Judit Castellà ◽  
Cristina Sotoca ◽  
Santiago Estaún ◽  
Sergi Valero ◽  
...  

<p>Recent research has focused on behavioral correlates of temporal perspective (TP), suggesting that this individual difference has an influence on many health-related behaviors such as smoking and substance use, physical activity or life satisfaction. It is suggested that a consistently biased temporal orientation is associated with some psychiatric disorders and mediated by personality factors. However, few studies have explored the relationship between personality and TP from a psychobiological approach. The aim of the study was to examine the relationship between the Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory (ZTPI) and Zuckerman-Kuhlman Personality Questionnaire (ZKPQ) in a sample of 196 undergraduate students through a multiple regression analyses. Results showed that: Past-Negative correlated positively with Neuroticism-Anxiety and negatively with Activity; Present Hedonistic correlated positively with Impulsive-Sensation Seeking and Sociability in a very high degree; and Future correlated positively with Neuroticism-Anxiety and Activity, and negatively with Impulsive-Sensation Seeking. Results are discussed in terms of the definition of both scales, their relationships and their implications in applied fields.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (8) ◽  
pp. 3114-3145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ya (Lisa) Lin ◽  
Weilei Shi ◽  
John E. Prescott ◽  
Haibin Yang

Time orientation matters. While a temporal perspective is widely recognized as an important lens in strategic management research, few studies have explored how top managers’ temporal orientation affects strategic decision-making processes. We propose that top managers’ subjective perception of time, specifically, their long-term orientation, positively affects the comprehensiveness, speed, and creativity of strategic decision-making processes and that industry context moderates these relationships. Drawing on the organization-environment fit perspective and associated compatibility and temporal fit mechanisms, we found considerable support for our hypotheses in the semiconductor and pharmaceutical industries in China. Our findings reinforce the perspective that temporal referent points act as anchors for strategic decision-making processes.


Author(s):  
Justine Buck Quijada

History in the Soviet Union was a political project. From the Soviet perspective, Buryats, an indigenous Siberian ethnic group, were a “backward” nationality that was carried along on the inexorable march toward the Communist utopian future. When the Soviet Union ended, the Soviet version of history lost its power and Buryats, like other Siberian indigenous peoples, were able to revive religious and cultural traditions that had been suppressed by the Soviet state. In the process, they also recovered knowledge about the past that the Soviet Union had silenced. Borrowing the analytic lens of the chronotope from Bakhtin, this book argues that rituals have chronotopes which situate people within time and space. As they revived rituals, post-Soviet Buryats encountered new historical information and traditional ways of being in time that enabled them to reimagine the Buryat past and what it means to be Buryat. Through the temporal perspective of a reincarnating Buddhist monk, Dashi-Dorzho Etigelov, Buddhists come to see the Soviet period as a test on the path of dharma. Shamanic practitioners, in contrast, renegotiate their relationship to the past by speaking to their ancestors through the bodies of shamans. By comparing the versions of history that are produced in Buddhist, shamanic, and civic rituals, Buddhists, Shamans, and Soviets offers a new lens for analyzing ritual, a new perspective on how an indigenous people grapples with a history of state repression, and an innovative approach to the ethnographic study of how people know about the past.


Author(s):  
Anne Mette MØLLER

Abstract Deliberation is a widely recognized but understudied aspect of frontline decision-making. This study contributes to theory development by exploring deliberative practices in frontline organizations and their implications for decision-making. Drawing on a multi-sited ethnographic study in three Danish child welfare agencies, the analysis clarifies the multiple purposes of deliberation in everyday practice and shows how deliberation is enabled and structured by formalized and informal deliberative organizational routines. Findings show that deliberation may influence individual decision-making or amount to collective decision-making. Depending on how deliberative organizational routines are enacted, deliberation may serve to enhance professional judgment, ensure appropriate justification for decisions and alleviate uncertainty and emotional strain. Yet, while deliberation represents a productive form of collective coping, deliberative routines may also obscure transparency and reify dysfunctional group dynamics. A conceptual framework is developed to support further research into the purposes, practices, and implications of deliberation across diverse street-level contexts.


2017 ◽  
Vol 48 (7) ◽  
pp. 761-776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaqi Liang

Public organizations function in an environment of goal multiplicity and constantly juggle goal trade-off and synergy. However, little empirical research explores how the potential conflict between effectiveness and equity affects government agencies’ decision making. This study examines the extent to which public agencies are committed to regulatory effectiveness and social equity in environmental policy management, and the circumstances under which administrative agencies engage in goal trade-off and synergy. Analyzing data on the Clean Air Act in New York State, this study finds that although regulatory effectiveness is salient to government’s policy implementation, equity-oriented policy is likely to give rise to trade-off in this goal domain. The state agency manages environmental programs in an equitable way, and policy intervention has inconsistent effects on the equity goal achievement. The agency does, in some instances, synergize two goals in loci reflecting the convergence of task demands, but equity-oriented policy does not reinforce such behavioral pattern. Findings beg the question regarding how public policies and programs can be devised in ways that help avert goal trade-off and engender the maximum level of social outcomes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-86
Author(s):  
David C. Watson

The present research examined the dual nature of the materialistic personality in terms of temporal perspective, subjective well-being, and materialism. The dual-nature model hypothesizes an anxious “mouse” type and a more flamboyant “peacock” type of materialist. Previous research has found a relationship between materialism and past-negative and present fatalistic temporal orientation. This study extended this research by examining the future-negative perspective and its relationship to materialism and well-being. It was hypothesized that the two types of materialists would have different temporal profiles. In addition, it was predicted that a future-negative perspective would mediate the relationship between materialism and well-being as was previously found with past-negative temporal orientation. The results indicated higher dark-future, future-negative, and past-negative scores with the “mouse” type materialists and higher present hedonistic scores in the “peacock” type materialists. Mediation analysis showed an indirect effect of a future-negative perspective in the relationship between materialism and well-being.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rene Versteegh

<p><b>A need for a more environmentally concerned society features prominently in academic discussion, popular media, and popular consciousness. However, individuals continue to consume as they always have, with little predicted immediate change. A well-established conversation in the literature highlights the difference between consumer intentions and consumer behaviour with respect to purchasing sustainable goods.</b></p> <p> This thesis examines the academic understanding of what internal motivators may factor in an individual's decision to purchase a 'sustainable' good. Image congruence, self-construal, temporal orientation, and temporal discounting are examined in the context of purchasing sustainable goods. The conceptual basis for this research takes the perspective that whilst individuals and society may perceive the purchase of sustainable goods and pro-environmental behaviour as a positive behaviour, individuals may choose to postpone this behaviour, or defer to their own self-interest compared to the interests of the society. Furthermore, there is a cost to sustainable consumption, either monetary or in product effectiveness. Thus, consciously, or unconsciously consumers are responding to a product trade-off. </p> <p>This research contributes to the academy's understanding of how image congruence, self-construal, temporal orientation, and temporal discounting interact with each other and the interaction between these variables and sustainable goods purchases. To the best of the author's knowledge investigating the three theoretical threads in combination, has not before been accomplished. Image congruence and self-construal offer insights into an individual’s social value orientation. Temporal orientation and temporal discounting can explain how individuals consider actions in the context of the present and future. The inclusion of temporal orientation examines an individual's view of time and decision-making as a consequence of this context. Therefore, image congruence, self-construal, temporal orientation are three powerful internal motivators of behaviour, and their interaction is expected to help explain consumer decision making with respect to the purchase of sustainable goods. Combined, these three factors help to address the consumer trade-off described before. To better understand the nature of sustainable goods purchase intention the effect of age, gender, and parenthood were explored and tested.</p> <p>This research used a quantitative methodology; a survey distributed to an online survey panel was used to validate and test the conceptual model. The quantitative methodology chosen allows for the collection of a broad range of views from a broad range of participants. Image congruence, self-construal, and temporal orientation were tested using existing scales. Multiple contributions have been made using this approach, including the adaptation of temporal-discounting activity-based scenario to online panel data collection. </p> <p>An activity to understand how individuals perceive time was designed and an initial test performed. This activity contributes to an understanding of three commonly used term; present, near-future, and far-future. Scale refinement was undertaken to measure the study constructs better using online data collection while temporal discounting was measured using an online activity, rather than an existing scale. A challenge faced was in the construction of an activity, readily understood by survey panel members. Existing scales measuring image congruence, self-construal, and temporal orientation also measured information not necessary to this research and so were further refined. Development of a calculation style question was also tested. This question asked participants to make a choice relative to a baseline choice, for example, 'receive $0, plus $30', rather than, 'receive $30'. </p> <p>An understanding of how different age groups and family structures consider the future is offered, as well as how these individuals see themselves in relation to society. This understanding offers insight into the divide between attitude and behaviour. </p> <p>Image congruence and interdependent self-construal were found to be significant predictors of purchase intention. Differing effects were found in the presented model when participants had high or low interdependent self-construal, high or low independent self-construal, high or low income, were younger or older, and whether they were parents. When asked to categorise time, the majority of participants defined the boundary between present, and near future as occurring between 14 and 30 days, and the boundary between near future and far future was considered to occur between six months and twelve months.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rene Versteegh

<p><b>A need for a more environmentally concerned society features prominently in academic discussion, popular media, and popular consciousness. However, individuals continue to consume as they always have, with little predicted immediate change. A well-established conversation in the literature highlights the difference between consumer intentions and consumer behaviour with respect to purchasing sustainable goods.</b></p> <p> This thesis examines the academic understanding of what internal motivators may factor in an individual's decision to purchase a 'sustainable' good. Image congruence, self-construal, temporal orientation, and temporal discounting are examined in the context of purchasing sustainable goods. The conceptual basis for this research takes the perspective that whilst individuals and society may perceive the purchase of sustainable goods and pro-environmental behaviour as a positive behaviour, individuals may choose to postpone this behaviour, or defer to their own self-interest compared to the interests of the society. Furthermore, there is a cost to sustainable consumption, either monetary or in product effectiveness. Thus, consciously, or unconsciously consumers are responding to a product trade-off. </p> <p>This research contributes to the academy's understanding of how image congruence, self-construal, temporal orientation, and temporal discounting interact with each other and the interaction between these variables and sustainable goods purchases. To the best of the author's knowledge investigating the three theoretical threads in combination, has not before been accomplished. Image congruence and self-construal offer insights into an individual’s social value orientation. Temporal orientation and temporal discounting can explain how individuals consider actions in the context of the present and future. The inclusion of temporal orientation examines an individual's view of time and decision-making as a consequence of this context. Therefore, image congruence, self-construal, temporal orientation are three powerful internal motivators of behaviour, and their interaction is expected to help explain consumer decision making with respect to the purchase of sustainable goods. Combined, these three factors help to address the consumer trade-off described before. To better understand the nature of sustainable goods purchase intention the effect of age, gender, and parenthood were explored and tested.</p> <p>This research used a quantitative methodology; a survey distributed to an online survey panel was used to validate and test the conceptual model. The quantitative methodology chosen allows for the collection of a broad range of views from a broad range of participants. Image congruence, self-construal, and temporal orientation were tested using existing scales. Multiple contributions have been made using this approach, including the adaptation of temporal-discounting activity-based scenario to online panel data collection. </p> <p>An activity to understand how individuals perceive time was designed and an initial test performed. This activity contributes to an understanding of three commonly used term; present, near-future, and far-future. Scale refinement was undertaken to measure the study constructs better using online data collection while temporal discounting was measured using an online activity, rather than an existing scale. A challenge faced was in the construction of an activity, readily understood by survey panel members. Existing scales measuring image congruence, self-construal, and temporal orientation also measured information not necessary to this research and so were further refined. Development of a calculation style question was also tested. This question asked participants to make a choice relative to a baseline choice, for example, 'receive $0, plus $30', rather than, 'receive $30'. </p> <p>An understanding of how different age groups and family structures consider the future is offered, as well as how these individuals see themselves in relation to society. This understanding offers insight into the divide between attitude and behaviour. </p> <p>Image congruence and interdependent self-construal were found to be significant predictors of purchase intention. Differing effects were found in the presented model when participants had high or low interdependent self-construal, high or low independent self-construal, high or low income, were younger or older, and whether they were parents. When asked to categorise time, the majority of participants defined the boundary between present, and near future as occurring between 14 and 30 days, and the boundary between near future and far future was considered to occur between six months and twelve months.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-183
Author(s):  
M.D. Kondratyev

The article presents research data on the socio-psychological and personal characteristics of intellectually successful adolescents with different intragroup status and recommendations for their psychological support. Intellectually successful adolescents are adolescents who have shown high results in participating in intellectual competitions and contests. The integral status of an individual in a contact community (school class) used as an indicator of intragroup status. Characteristics such as temporal orientation (ZTPI, F. Zimbardo), temporal perspective of the future (J. Nutten) personality orientation (orientation questionnaire, B.Bass), social concepts of success (P. Verges) were investigated. Intellectually successful adolescents with different intragroup status differ in the specifics of socio-psychological and personal characteristics. The article provides recommendations for a wide range of professionals working with adolescents.


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