Media, Communication, and Work
Media, Communication, and Work
- Digital stress due to personal and professional availability norms & online-vigilance
- Procrastination due to private media use at work
Selected publications in this research area:
- Klingelhoefer, J., & Meier, A. (2023). Social media and well-being at work, at home, and in-between: a review. In J. Skopek (Eds.), Research handbook on digital sociology. (pp. 398–418). Edward Elgar.
- Freytag, A., Knop-Huelss, K., Meier, A., Reinecke, L., Hefner, D., Klimmt, C., & Vorderer, P. (2021). Permanently online—always stressed out? The effects of permanent connectedness on stress experiences. Human Communication Research, 47(2), 132-165. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hcr/hqaa014
- Johannes, N., Meier, A., Reinecke, L., Ehlert, S., Setiawan, D.N., Walasek, N.,... Veling, H. (2021). The relationship between online vigilance and affective well-being in everyday life: Combining smartphone logging with experience sampling. Media Psychology, 24(5), 581-605. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15213269.2020.1768122
All publications of the Assistant Professorship can be found here.