Personality Factors: The Role of Individual Differences in Stress Appraisal

Sarah Davies-Robertson
5 min readApr 27, 2023

Written by Farhan Shahzad and Sarah Davies-Robertson

Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash

A number of researchers have accounted for the role of an employee’s personality in their response to stress. This is known as individual differences, which essentially accounts for the unique characteristics an individual has, with potential consequences to how they interact with their environment.

While occupational stressors and job characteristics may have an impact on employee wellbeing, not all employees will react to these stressors in the same way, if at all. The Person-Environment Fit (French and Caplan, 1972) encompasses individual differences and asserts that it is the individual’s interaction with their environment that causes stress in the way that Parkes (1994) argues that the relationship between the individual and the organisation as factors that contribute to stress is non-invariant. Thus, the definition of stress here is subjective and it is the individual’s perception of the stress as a threat that causes psychological strain.

According to the Person-Environment Fit, stress, as a result of work overload, is because the employee does not have the capabilities to manage their workload, while acknowledging that others may be able to manage that level of work with ease. While capabilities are…

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Sarah Davies-Robertson

British lifestyle blogger, researcher, journalist and PhD candidate in occupational health and medicine. Follow @sarah_tottle on instagram.