Project: Digital Wellbeing in a Culture of Ubiquitous Connectivity: Towards a Dynamic Pathway Model
2021-06-01 – 2026-05-31
- Abstract
Ubiquitous connectivity increases our autonomy: We can connect to content, contacts and services without time or place constraints. Paradoxically, however, ubiquitous connectivity also threatens that very autonomy: The addictive design of digital technologies diverts attention away from our primary activities, and in our contemporary culture of connectivity we face increasing pressures to be permanently online and permanently connected. This mobile connectivity paradox presents an urgent challenge: How can we balance connectivity and disconnectivity so that we experience digital wellbeing? Current scholarship lacks answers to this question. It fails to account for the dynamic nature of digital wellbeing and to sufficiently address the interplay between psychological, technological and social factors. This research project overcomes these limitations by building a dynamic pathway model of digital wellbeing. The model is tested via a multi-method and multiparadigmatic empirical approach that integrates traditional data sources with behavioral data gathered via device logging and dynamic data on users’ momentary states and contexts gathered via mobile experience sampling. Data are analyzed using innovative digital ethnographic and machine learning methods. This empirical test of the dynamic pathway model of digital wellbeing gives insight into (1) how individuals understand and practice digital wellbeing, (2) which constellations of person-, device- and context-specific factors form pathways that lead to short-term changes in digital wellbeing and long-term changes in indicators of overall wellbeing such as burnout or depression, and (3) what impact digital wellbeing interventions have on digital wellbeing. Armed with these insights, stakeholders such as users, technology developers and policy makers can take steps to increase digital wellbeing.
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Always on, always rushed for time? Exploring momentary associations between passively sensed smartphone use, feeling rushed, and perceived task juggling
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Tapping into feelings : an experience sampling study examining the dynamics of smartphone-based emotion regulation and negative affect
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
From bliss to burden : an ethnographic inquiry into how social, material and individual obstacles to digital well-being shape everyday life
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Theorizing dis/connection : a mutual invitation to mobile media and digital disconnection scholars
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Analyzing the affective consequences of normal sleep fluctuations : a multiverse investigation using experience sampling data
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Methodological considerations for social media intervention studies
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Nonsignificance misinterpreted as an effect’s absence in psychology : prevalence and temporal analyses
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Home maintainer, guardian or companion? Three commentaries on the implications of domestic AI in the household
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
The effects of social media abstinence on affective well-being and life satisfaction : a systematic review and meta-analysis
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- Book Chapter
- open access
Digital disconnection as a plight or right? A manifesto to re-imagine digital disconnection as a reasonable accommodation