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In:
electronic International Journal of Time Use Research (eIJTUR)
3 (2006), 1, 1-26
| Jutta M. Joesch, C. Katharina Spieß
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We analyze the role of personality in occupational choice and wages using data from Germany for the years 1992 to 2009. Characterizing personality by use of seven complementary measures (Big Five personality traits, locus of control, and a measure of reciprocity), the empirical findings show that personal characteristics are important determinants of occupational choice. Associated with that, identical ...
In:
Empirical Economics
47 (2014), 2, 553-592
| Katrin John, Stephan L. Thomsen
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London:
Department for Work and Pensions,
2002,
(DWP Working Paper No. 5)
| Anthony Johnson
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In:
Review of Income and Wealth
50 (2004), 1, 125-134
| David S. Johnson, Barbara Boyle Torrey
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Personality traits are related to health behaviours, but it is unknown whether changes in personality would lead to changes in health behaviours. We examined whether naturally occurring, within-individual variation in personality traits over time is associated with corresponding changes in smoking, physical activity, alcohol consumption, and body mass index. Data were from seven longitudinal cohort ...
In:
European Journal of Personality
32 (2018), 6, 642-652
| Markus Jokela, Jaakko Airaksinen, Mika Kivimaki, Christian Hakulinen
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In:
European Economic Review
50 (2006), 4, 877-907
| Grégory Jolivet, Fabien Postel-Vinay, Jean-Marc Robin
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Individual heterogeneity plays a key role in explaining variation in self-reported well-being and, in particular, health satisfaction. It is hypothesised that the influence of this heterogeneity varies over levels of health and increases over the life-cycle. These hypotheses are tested with data on health satisfaction from 22 waves of the German Socioeconomic Panel (GSOEP).Nonlinear fixed effects methods ...
Bochum, Dortmund, Duisburg, Essen:
Ruhr Graduate School in Economics and RWI Essen,
2007,
(Ruhr Economic Papers #8)
| Andrew M. Jones, Stefanie Schurer
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We document the extent of socio-economic status (SES) inequalities in bodily pain in Australia, Britain and Germany, with a particular focus on whether such inequalities widen over the life course. Random-effects logistic and kernel regressions are used to estimate odds ratios of experiencing severe pain by income, educational qualification and occupational status, and to graph age–pain profiles, while ...
In:
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society)
177 (2014), 4, 783-806
| Andrew M. Jones, Stefanie Schurer, Michael A. Shields
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In:
Medindia on October 06, 2010
(2010),
| Kathy Jones
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Dortmund:
Universität Dortmund, Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät,
1998,
(Diskussionspapier Nr. 98-18)
| Hendrik Jürges