Personality traits such as anxiety, self‐esteem and aggressive hostility are often thought to affect the stress that a person perceives or manifests. With data from 176 male executives, this study suggests that there are indirect and interacting relationships between personality and general health. This article proposes a cybernetic framework that links personality with other variables in understanding overall health. The framework specifies that personal characteristics (i.e. age), personality, and environment all play a role, each interacting systemically. The framework provides a basis for illustrating these interactions. For example, while type A personalities are more likely to get involved in more stressful situations, their negative health effects might depend on other variables, such as self‐esteem and years in the job. While personality features are important risk factors, they may not, by themselves, predict stress. Stress is the result of interacting variables including age, position, job level, the stress experience, and one's personality.
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1 February 2004
Research Article|
February 01 2004
A cybernetic framework linking personality and other variables in understanding general health Available to Purchase
J. Barton Cunningham;
J. Barton Cunningham
University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada
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Joe Lischeron;
Joe Lischeron
University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada
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Hian Chye Koh;
Hian Chye Koh
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
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Mike Farrier
Mike Farrier
Farrier & Associates, Calgary, Canada
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6933
Print ISSN: 0048-3486
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Personnel Review (2004) 33 (1): 55–80.
Citation
Barton Cunningham J, Lischeron J, Chye Koh H, Farrier M (2004), "A cybernetic framework linking personality and other variables in understanding general health". Personnel Review, Vol. 33 No. 1 pp. 55–80, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/00483480410510624
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