30 research outputs found

    L’influence de la perception temporelle sur le vécu d’un événement, le départ à la retraite.

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    Alors que la cessation d’activité professionnelle induit certaines ruptures notamment dans la gestion et la perception individuelle du temps, une étude qualitative explore les liens entre l’évolution de la perception temporelle des individus et l’expérience personnelle de la retraite. Cette influence est ensuite confirmée par une étude quantitative.The transition to retirement involves various disruptions, notably use of time and temporal perceptions. First, a qualitative study explores links between temporal perceptions and subjective experiences of retirement. Then, a quantitative study tests the influence of individual time perception on subjective experiences of retirement.Gestion du temps; Retirement; Time-awareness; Time management; Retraite; Intuition de la durée;

    L’influence de la perception temporelle sur le vécu d’un événement, le départ à la retraite

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    Alors que la cessation d’activité professionnelle induit certaines ruptures notamment dans la gestion et la perception individuelle du temps, une étude qualitative explore les liens entre l’évolution de la perception temporelle des individus et l’expérience personnelle de la retraite. Cette influence est ensuite confirmée par une étude quantitative.The transition to retirement involves various disruptions, notably use of time and temporal perceptions. First, a qualitative study explores links between temporal perceptions and subjective experiences of retirement. Then, a quantitative study tests the influence of individual time perception on subjective experiences of retirement.ou

    Le concept et la représentation visuelle de la naturalité des produits alimentaires pour le consommateur français.

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    International audienceThe question of the naturalness of products from the food industry is an increasingly important issue for the firms. They are particularly interested in the consumer's perception of this naturalness, with questions of whether the consumer can still consider, and under what conditions, that a product that has been produced by the food industry is considered natural. The research aim is to understand the French consumer representation of naturalness of a food product. To do this, a mixed qualitative and quantitative approach, using the MIEL method. It shows that natural food is idealized. Four dimensions constitute the concept of naturalness; according to consumer profiles, these dimensions are more or less determining.La question de la naturalité des produits issus de l’industrie agro-alimentaire constitue une sujet d’attention de plus en plus important pour les acteurs de cette industrie. Ils s’interrogent notamment sur la perception qu’à le consommateur de cette naturalité, avec en filigrane, la question de savoir si le consommateur peut encore considérer, et sous quelles conditions, qu’un produit passé par les usines de l’industrie agro-alimentaires, peut être considéré comme naturel ? L’objectif de cette recherche est de comprendre la représentation de la naturalité d’un produit alimentaire pour le consommateur français. Pour cela, une approche mixte qualitative et quantitative, au travers de la méthode MIEL, a été réalisée. Elle a mis en évidence que le produit naturel est idéalisé. Quatre dimensions constituent le concept de naturalité et selon les profils de consommateurs, ces dimensions sont plus ou moins déterminantes

    Vital Service Captivity: Coping Strategies and Identity Negotiation

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    International audienceNursing homes are the quintessential example of vital service captivity. Consumers need vital services when they can no longer fulfil their basic needs on their own and their only choice is to delegate them to the market (e.g. care services for long-term and chronic illnesses, eating assistance at mealtimes). The service is referred to as ‘captive’ because older people are generally unwilling to use it, and when they have to, their options are limited. For elderly consumers, there is ‘no exit possible’, and as such they must integrate the service into their sense of self. The paper aims to (1) identify strategies for coping with vital service captivity and (2) present the identity negotiation mechanisms that lead people to choose one strategy over another. The study was conducted over a 6-month period in three nursing homes. Data collection includes semi-structured interviews, focus groups, participant observations, and micro-interviews with consumers – elderly residents and their families – and nursing home staff. Its main contribution is to highlight that coping with vital service captivity is a differential process. Consumers implement multiple coping strategies simultaneously, and these strategies are linked to three areas: routinization, socialization, and assimilation of a new social status. Moreover, implementing coping strategies means striking a balance between ‘disengagement’ and ‘engagement’ that not only takes into account former life trajectory, future prospects, and social comparisons, but also any changes in physical or cognitive skills and family support. Understanding these coping strategies and identity negotiation mechanisms highlights some unintended consequences on residents’ well-being, such as the importance of standardizing how the service is organized because it provides a stable framework, or the importance given to the well-being of all stakeholders (other consumers, staff) as a result of the community living situation
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