Reconceptualizing E-Mail Overload

This study explores social processes associated with e-mail overload, drawing on Sproull and Kiesler's first and second-order effects of communication technologies and Boden's theory of lamination. In a three-part study, the authors examined e-mail interactions from a government organizati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of business and technical communication 2006-07, Vol.20 (3), p.252-287
Hauptverfasser: Thomas, Gail Fann, King, Cynthia L., Baroni, Brian, Cook, Linda, Keitelman, Marian, Miller, Steve, Wardle, Adelia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study explores social processes associated with e-mail overload, drawing on Sproull and Kiesler's first and second-order effects of communication technologies and Boden's theory of lamination. In a three-part study, the authors examined e-mail interactions from a government organization by logging e-mails, submitting an e-mail string to close textual analysis, and analyzing focus group data about e-mail overload. The results reveal three characteristics that contribute to e-mail overload— unstable requests, pressures to respond, and the delegation of tasks and shifting interactants—suggesting that e-mail talk, as social interaction, may both create and affect overload.
ISSN:1050-6519
1552-4574
DOI:10.1177/1050651906287253