A collection of quantitative survey data from a research project examining workaholism, experiential avoidance, and intolerance of uncertainty among young adult university students in India. It was collected using standardized self-report measures and comprises undergraduate and postgraduate students recruited from Indian higher-education institutions.
Use Cases
- Examine the predictive relationship between experiential avoidance and workaholism scores among Indian university students.
- Test whether intolerance of uncertainty moderates the relationship between experiential avoidance and workaholism.
- Analyze demographic variables in relation to workaholism, experiential avoidance, and intolerance of uncertainty scores.
- Conduct comparative research on workaholism and psychological flexibility in non-Western or emerging adult populations.
Strengths
- Data collected using standardized self-report measures for key psychological constructs.
- Focus on a specific demographic: young adult undergraduate and postgraduate university students in India.
- All responses were collected anonymously with no personally identifiable information included.
Limitations
- Sample size and number of rows are unknown, limiting assessment of statistical power.
- Specific columns and data features are not detailed, restricting precise analytical planning.
- Geographic focus is limited to India, which may limit generalizability to other cultural contexts.
Provenance
- Source
- Harvard Dataverse
- Collection Method
- Quantitative survey data collected via standardized self-report measures.
- Time Range
- null
- Freshness
- null
- Geography
- India