Sustained performance under overload: personality and individual differences in stress and coping
Sustained performance under overload: personality and individual differences in stress and coping
Individuals differ considerably in their vulnerability to task-induced stress, in part because of individual differences in cognitions of task demands. This study investigated the personality and cognitive factors that may control stress vulnerability, using a ‘rapid information processing’ task that was configured to overload attention. Stress response was assessed using the Dundee Stress State Questionnaire (Matthews, G. et al., 2002. Fundamental dimensions of subjective state in performance settings: task engagement, distress and worry. Emotion, 2, 315–340), as well as instruments assessing workload, appraisal and coping. Time pressure was manipulated as a between-subjects stress factor. Higher time pressure tended to elicit decreased effort and task engagement and avoidance coping. However, much of the variance in state response was attributable to individual differences in appraisal and coping. The personality trait of neuroticism related to some of these cognitive processes. Subjective state, appraisal and coping were also predictive of objective performance indices. Consistent with the transactional theory of stress, subjective states appear to correspond to configurations of cognitive processes that signal the participant’s mode of adaptation to task demands. The findings underscore the importance of accommodating individual differences in selecting operators for handling overload, for designing interfaces and for training operators to manage overload successfully.
Coping, Overload, Stress, Sustained attention, Task engagement
417-422
Matthews, Gerald
059730a6-fd15-40ce-9468-8c81f3718996
Campbell, Sian E.
bd32379d-66a8-4ac4-afb3-dcafe6445999
2009
Matthews, Gerald
059730a6-fd15-40ce-9468-8c81f3718996
Campbell, Sian E.
bd32379d-66a8-4ac4-afb3-dcafe6445999
Matthews, Gerald and Campbell, Sian E.
(2009)
Sustained performance under overload: personality and individual differences in stress and coping.
Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science, 10 (5), .
(doi:10.1080/14639220903106395).
Abstract
Individuals differ considerably in their vulnerability to task-induced stress, in part because of individual differences in cognitions of task demands. This study investigated the personality and cognitive factors that may control stress vulnerability, using a ‘rapid information processing’ task that was configured to overload attention. Stress response was assessed using the Dundee Stress State Questionnaire (Matthews, G. et al., 2002. Fundamental dimensions of subjective state in performance settings: task engagement, distress and worry. Emotion, 2, 315–340), as well as instruments assessing workload, appraisal and coping. Time pressure was manipulated as a between-subjects stress factor. Higher time pressure tended to elicit decreased effort and task engagement and avoidance coping. However, much of the variance in state response was attributable to individual differences in appraisal and coping. The personality trait of neuroticism related to some of these cognitive processes. Subjective state, appraisal and coping were also predictive of objective performance indices. Consistent with the transactional theory of stress, subjective states appear to correspond to configurations of cognitive processes that signal the participant’s mode of adaptation to task demands. The findings underscore the importance of accommodating individual differences in selecting operators for handling overload, for designing interfaces and for training operators to manage overload successfully.
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Published date: 2009
Keywords:
Coping, Overload, Stress, Sustained attention, Task engagement
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Local EPrints ID: 505142
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505142
ISSN: 1463-922X
PURE UUID: 38d14b9b-a0d3-45bb-b147-8a5c28f12679
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Date deposited: 30 Sep 2025 16:58
Last modified: 01 Oct 2025 02:08
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Author:
Gerald Matthews
Author:
Sian E. Campbell
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