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Is “zoom fatigue” real? Video conferencing boosts productivity but worsens well-being

Is “zoom fatigue” real? Video conferencing boosts productivity but worsens well-being
Is “zoom fatigue” real? Video conferencing boosts productivity but worsens well-being
Video conferencing has become a predominant mode of workplace meetings, especially during the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak. In this research, we integrate objective self-awareness theory with the interface design of video conferencing tools to explain the mixed implications of video conferencing for employees. We hypothesize that time spent on video conferencing is positively related to state self-consciousness (i.e., being conscious about one’s self as the object of awareness). State self-consciousness, in turn, is positively related to work productivity but at the same time negatively related to well-being. We further hypothesize that introverted employees are more affected by participation in video conferencing than their extroverted counterparts. In a study employing experience sampling methodology among 144 United Kingdom-based employees who were working remotely on account of the mandatory closure of the workplace, we found evidence for the hypotheses. Specifically, time spent on video conferencing on a workday increased state self-consciousness on that day, which, in turn, increased work productivity. The negative relationship between state self-consciousness and the moderating effect of extraversion received marginal support. A supplementary experimental study further tested the tenet of objective self-awareness theory. We discuss the implications of our findings for how organizations can manage video conferencing as they move to remote work at unprecedented rates.
2151-6561
Tan, Noriko
34a88113-4db3-43d9-a5a6-83c7ef5c0c65
Yao, Jingxian
93c82528-8a2e-4a8a-8409-aef469d2a9de
Lu, Yizhen
5c34dda3-c1b4-40d9-a3e2-ab1a4e2e880d
Narayanan, Jayanth
7a20d472-2093-47c3-a9e1-b8cfa6c33fd3
Tan, Noriko
34a88113-4db3-43d9-a5a6-83c7ef5c0c65
Yao, Jingxian
93c82528-8a2e-4a8a-8409-aef469d2a9de
Lu, Yizhen
5c34dda3-c1b4-40d9-a3e2-ab1a4e2e880d
Narayanan, Jayanth
7a20d472-2093-47c3-a9e1-b8cfa6c33fd3

Tan, Noriko, Yao, Jingxian, Lu, Yizhen and Narayanan, Jayanth (2022) Is “zoom fatigue” real? Video conferencing boosts productivity but worsens well-being. Academy of Management Proceedings, 2022 (1). (doi:10.5465/AMBPP.2022.11198abstract).

Record type: Meeting abstract

Abstract

Video conferencing has become a predominant mode of workplace meetings, especially during the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak. In this research, we integrate objective self-awareness theory with the interface design of video conferencing tools to explain the mixed implications of video conferencing for employees. We hypothesize that time spent on video conferencing is positively related to state self-consciousness (i.e., being conscious about one’s self as the object of awareness). State self-consciousness, in turn, is positively related to work productivity but at the same time negatively related to well-being. We further hypothesize that introverted employees are more affected by participation in video conferencing than their extroverted counterparts. In a study employing experience sampling methodology among 144 United Kingdom-based employees who were working remotely on account of the mandatory closure of the workplace, we found evidence for the hypotheses. Specifically, time spent on video conferencing on a workday increased state self-consciousness on that day, which, in turn, increased work productivity. The negative relationship between state self-consciousness and the moderating effect of extraversion received marginal support. A supplementary experimental study further tested the tenet of objective self-awareness theory. We discuss the implications of our findings for how organizations can manage video conferencing as they move to remote work at unprecedented rates.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2022
Published date: 1 August 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497120
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497120
ISSN: 2151-6561
PURE UUID: 4872bde4-84d3-4572-9def-248206f3a514
ORCID for Yizhen Lu: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6031-3189

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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2025 17:42
Last modified: 16 Jan 2025 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Noriko Tan
Author: Jingxian Yao
Author: Yizhen Lu ORCID iD
Author: Jayanth Narayanan

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