Open AccessBook
How Americans Use Time: A Social-Psychological Analysis of Everyday Behavior
John Robinson
- 01 Jan 1977
244
About: The article was published on 01 Jan 1977. and is currently open access.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Is Anyone Doing the Housework? Trends in the Gender Division of Household Labor
TL;DR: The authors found that the number of hours of domestic labor has continued to decline steadily and predictably since 1965, mainly due to dramatic declines among women, who have cut their housework hours almost in half since the 1960s.
Economic Dependency, Gender, and the Division of Labor at Home
TL;DR: This paper found that the more a husband relies on his wife for economic support, the less housework he does, and that by doing less household chores, economically dependent husbands also become "dogender."
1.4K
The Experience Sampling Method
Reed W. Larson,Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi +1 more
- 01 Apr 2014
TL;DR: The Experience Sampling Method (ESM) as discussed by the authors is a research procedure for studying what people do, feel, and think during their daily lives, it consists in asking individuals to provide systematic self-reports at random occasions during the waking hours of a normal week.
1.2K
The Time Famine: Toward a Sociology of Work Time
TL;DR: The authors describe a qualitative study of how people use their time at work, why they use it this way, and whether their way of using time is optimal for them or their work groups.