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Showing papers on "Spillover effect published in 1984"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article found that women with young children at home are most likely to report high levels of spillover, in contrast to mothers of older children and to fathers regardless of their position in the family life cycle.
Abstract: It is argued that while researchers have emphasized work's impact on the family, the family exerts important influences on the workplace that have been generally overlooked. This article draws upon evidence of family-to-work spillover from a recent exploratory field study in a large manufacturing plant. Semistructured interviews with 55 employees, both on the job and at home, revealed that most employees recognized that their family lives influenced them at work. Analyses of variance examining positive and negative spillover from home to work suggested that women with young children at home are most likely to report high levels of spillover, in contrast to mothers of older children and to fathers regardless of their position in the family life cycle.

672 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors developed an hedonic price model of housing services in a racially segmented housing market, which considers a variety of human service facilities and their spillover effects and found that facilities significantly affect housing prices both positively and negatively, and these effects vary by racial submarket.

24 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a model that tests for the presence of spillover effects of union coverage across industry boundaries on wages and union coverage in vertically related industries is presented, showing that there is some evidence of spill-over effects from buying industries to the wages of nonunion workers.
Abstract: This paper outlines a model that tests for the presence of spillover effects of union coverage across industry boundaries on wages and union coverage in vertically related industries. There is some evidence of spillover effects from buying industries to the wages of nonunion workers and of such effects on the degree of union coverage from both buying and supplying industries.

17 citations





Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the early history of work on hydrogen spillover during the decade 1960-1970 can be found in this article, where a summary of the present state of knowledge of the phenomenon is presented.
Abstract: After a short review of the early history of work on hydrogen spillover during the decade 1960–1970, this paper presents a summary of the present state of knowledge of the phenomenon. Its effects are classified in terms of the nature of the hydrogen acceptor: (i) irreducible oxides, (ii) partially reducible oxides and related systems, (iii) oxides capable of forming hydrogen bronzes, (iv) reducible oxides not forming bronzes, and (v) carbon. The reversibility of hydrogen spillover is then briefly treated, and rate effects discussed in terms of the movement of mobile species across the various phase boundaries present in typical systems. Finally there is a short assessment of the possible importance of spillover during normal catalysed processing. The need for further systematic studies (e.g. on the effect of metal dispersion) and the wider use of isotopic tracer methods is strongly urged.