Digital Detox - Mitigating Digital Overuse in Times of Remote Work and Social Isolation

Remote work arrangements and limited recreational options in times of social isolation increase the risk of digital overuse for individuals. Its consequences can range from impaired mental health to issues of technology addiction. A conformant countermovement has popularised digital detoxing, a practice that endorses to deliberately limit technology use to reduce digital involvement and physiological stress. In times of social isolation, however, digital networking may provide the principle access to social interactions. To provide empirical evidence about the sweet spot between mitigating digital overuse and perceived social connectedness, this paper proposes a mixed-methods design to scrutinise the impact of digital detox measures in a professional context. Possible results will help to better understand how digital overuse may effectively be mitigated by remote workers and what measures organisations can take to create a digital environment that supports employee satisfaction and mental health.

[1]  Andrew K. Przybylski,et al.  Motivational, emotional, and behavioral correlates of fear of missing out , 2013, Comput. Hum. Behav..

[2]  Monika Gupta,et al.  Impact of Technostress in Enhancing Human Productivity: An Econometric Study , 2011 .

[3]  Moritz Büchi,et al.  Digital Overuse and Subjective Well-Being in a Digitized Society , 2019, Social Media + Society.

[4]  Anne Jones,et al.  Digital well-being , 2018 .

[5]  G. Rubio,et al.  Development of a Mobile Phone Addiction Craving Scale and Its Validation in a Spanish Adult Population , 2017, Front. Psychiatry.

[6]  Diego Zavaleta,et al.  Measures of Social Isolation , 2017 .

[7]  Arvid Kappas,et al.  Collective Emotions Online and Their Influence on Community Life , 2011, PloS one.

[8]  Jaehee Cho,et al.  Roles of Smartphone App Use in Improving Social Capital and Reducing Social Isolation , 2015, Cyberpsychology Behav. Soc. Netw..

[9]  Christophe Degryse,et al.  Digitalisation of the Economy and its Impact on Labour Markets , 2016 .

[10]  D. Ellis,et al.  Digital detox: The effect of smartphone abstinence on mood, anxiety, and craving. , 2019, Addictive behaviors.

[11]  Keri K. Stephens,et al.  Reconceptualizing Communication Overload and Building a Theoretical Foundation , 2017 .

[12]  Michael D. Myers,et al.  The qualitative interview in IS research: Examining the craft , 2007, Inf. Organ..

[13]  L. Hawkley,et al.  Perceived social isolation and cognition , 2009, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[14]  Marco Fasoli,et al.  “Digital Well-Being”. Developing a New Theoretical Tool For Media Literacy Research , 2017 .

[15]  M. Chayko Techno‐social Life: The Internet, Digital Technology, and Social Connectedness , 2014 .

[16]  Arun Rai Editor’s Comments: The COVID-19 Pandemic: Building Resilience with IS Research , 2020 .

[17]  Angsana A. Techatassanasoontorn,et al.  Internet Use and Well-Being of Young Adults , 2013, ICIS.

[18]  Matthew K. O. Lee,et al.  Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems ( PACIS ) 2014 UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF MOTIVES IN SMARTPHONE ADDICTION , 2014 .

[19]  Yvonne de Kort,et al.  Social connectedness: concept and measurement , 2009, Intelligent Environments.

[20]  Gunn Enli,et al.  Digital detox: Media resistance and the promise of authenticity , 2020, Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies.

[21]  Kimberly Young,et al.  Internet Addiction: The Emergence of a New Clinical Disorder , 1998, Cyberpsychology Behav. Soc. Netw..

[22]  Moritz Büchi,et al.  From Use to Overuse: Digital Inequality in the Age of Communication Abundance , 2019, Social Science Computer Review.

[23]  Lieven De Marez,et al.  MobileDNA: Relating Physiological Stress Measurements to Smartphone Usage to Assess the Effect of a Digital Detox , 2018, HCI.

[24]  Panos Markopoulos,et al.  Measuring affective benefits and costs of awareness systems supporting intimate social networks , 2004 .

[25]  Piergiorgio Corbetta The Qualitative Interview , 2003 .

[26]  Erik Albæk,et al.  Measuring Media Diet in a High-Choice Environment - Testing the List-Frequency Technique , 2016 .

[27]  V. Braun,et al.  Using thematic analysis in psychology , 2006 .