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Perpetual Mobile Availability as a Reason for Communication Overload: Experiences and Coping Strategies of Smartphone Users

Perpetual Mobile Availability as a Reason for Communication Overload: Experiences and Coping Strategies of Smartphone Users

Bernadette Kneidinger-Müller
Copyright: © 2017 |Pages: 27
ISBN13: 9781522520610|ISBN10: 1522520619|EISBN13: 9781522520627
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-2061-0.ch005
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MLA

Kneidinger-Müller, Bernadette. "Perpetual Mobile Availability as a Reason for Communication Overload: Experiences and Coping Strategies of Smartphone Users." Information and Communication Overload in the Digital Age, edited by Rui Pedro Figueiredo Marques and Joao Carlos Lopes Batista, IGI Global, 2017, pp. 93-119. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2061-0.ch005

APA

Kneidinger-Müller, B. (2017). Perpetual Mobile Availability as a Reason for Communication Overload: Experiences and Coping Strategies of Smartphone Users. In R. Marques & J. Batista (Eds.), Information and Communication Overload in the Digital Age (pp. 93-119). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2061-0.ch005

Chicago

Kneidinger-Müller, Bernadette. "Perpetual Mobile Availability as a Reason for Communication Overload: Experiences and Coping Strategies of Smartphone Users." In Information and Communication Overload in the Digital Age, edited by Rui Pedro Figueiredo Marques and Joao Carlos Lopes Batista, 93-119. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2017. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2061-0.ch005

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Abstract

Mobile communication media such as smartphones have dramatically increased the social availability of users. The perpetual contact is experienced quite ambivalently, not only as a big advantage of technological development but also as a new reason for increasing communication overload. This chapter details how people evaluate mobile availability in their everyday lives and how they cope with experiences of overload and stress. Using the transactional theory of stress and coping (Lazarus & Cohen, 1977), data from a diary study and qualitative interviews with German smartphone users are analyzed. The findings emphasize the high level of subjectivity that influences how everyday experiences of smartphone usage and mobile availability are evaluated.

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