Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W67471843> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 75 of
75
with 100 items per page.
- W67471843 startingPage "259" @default.
- W67471843 abstract "This study reports on bibliographic citation data for the term Cyberloafing identified in the comprehensive database PROQUEST Complete. The keyword search, which targeted articles only, produced 76 total 'hits'; of these 62 were specific to cyberloafing. A content analysis strategy classified articles across several designated topical areas. The major areas of research attention, to date, are focused on workplace monitoring, typology concerns, causative factors, organizational justice, and deterrence theory. Moreover, neglected areas of investigatory efforts include salient issues such as personality factors, ethics training, organizational commitment, telecommuting, and organizational culture/values. Future bibliographic research should examine a) trends in non-periodical literature such as books or conference papers, and b) legal-related research in law reviews and case law. ********** Cyberloafing has been defined as nonproductive workplace-related online behaviors that are predominantly opaque in nature (Lim, 2012). Typical cyberloafing behaviors include personal Email exchanges, web-surfing, online shopping, social networking activities, and text messaging. In addition, inappropriate and potentially illegal activities such as cyber-bullying, viewing adult entertainment sites, sexual harassment, and e-harassment are considered within the domain or purview of cyberloafing (see Piotrowski, 2012a). Like most innovations, the Internet and concomitant technologies have the potential for abuse and can be used for nefarious purposes. Not surprisingly, the inappropriate use of online and wireless technology in the workplace appears to be ubiquitous in these modem times, and can be an internal threat to organizational functions in terms of productivity, morale, organizational justice, and a potential source of liability. B y all accounts, the topic of cyberloafing has generated much research attention and remains an emerging issue across several academic disciplines (Griffiths, 2010). Thus, it would of interest to gauge the specific aspects of this emergent workplace phenomenon that have garnered the attention of scholars and researchers. In order to address this issue, a systematic review of the extant literature was performed to identify published articles on cyberloafing. To that end, this paper presents a bibliometric analysis on the topical areas that are emphasized and deemphasized in journal articles. Method Content analysis is a major methodological approach used in trying to identify research trends in the literature and several reports, based on this research strategy, have recently appeared (e.g., Piotrowski, 2012b). Since the aim of the current study was to obtain a comprehensive and inclusive listing of journal articles, a preliminary keyword search of several major academic databases was performed; for the term Cyberloafing, the following research output was obtained: ABI/INFORM (n=55), EBSCO Business Source Complete (n= 17), PsycINFO (n= 17), PROQUEST Complete (n=76). Based on this, PROQUEST, which combines 72 cross-disciplinary databases, was chosen as the search platform ( conducted on January 23, 2013). Then, each of 76 articles was reviewed individually to determine the major focus of the research study, based on the content of the article. A scoring template for tabulation of frequency counts across topical areas was constructed. The author attempted to determine the major focus of each article in an objective manner. Of the 76 articles, 14 were deemed unrelated to the specific issue of Cyberloafing and, thus the data analysis was based on 62 journal articles. Results and Discussion The results of this bibliometric exercise indicate that although the topic of cyberloafing is an emerging concern in practice, research efforts, to date, are somewhat focused on a rather narrow range of topics or issues (Table 1). In fact, the field appears to be struggling with definitional and typology aspects of cyberloafing (see Blanchard & Henle, 2008), and the current analysis confirms this fact. …" @default.
- W67471843 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W67471843 creator A5051943922 @default.
- W67471843 date "2012-09-01" @default.
- W67471843 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W67471843 title "Cyberloafing: A Content Analysis of the Emerging Literature" @default.
- W67471843 cites W1558247315 @default.
- W67471843 cites W1585857911 @default.
- W67471843 cites W2042700278 @default.
- W67471843 cites W2091025539 @default.
- W67471843 cites W2105992541 @default.
- W67471843 cites W2131789028 @default.
- W67471843 cites W2887648670 @default.
- W67471843 hasPublicationYear "2012" @default.
- W67471843 type Work @default.
- W67471843 sameAs 67471843 @default.
- W67471843 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W67471843 countsByYear W674718432014 @default.
- W67471843 countsByYear W674718432016 @default.
- W67471843 countsByYear W674718432021 @default.
- W67471843 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W67471843 hasAuthorship W67471843A5051943922 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C138331895 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C147789679 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C185592680 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C2777061679 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C2778976716 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C39549134 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C518677369 @default.
- W67471843 hasConcept C77805123 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C138331895 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C144024400 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C147789679 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C15744967 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C17744445 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C185592680 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C199539241 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C2777061679 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C2778976716 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C39549134 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C518677369 @default.
- W67471843 hasConceptScore W67471843C77805123 @default.
- W67471843 hasLocation W674718431 @default.
- W67471843 hasOpenAccess W67471843 @default.
- W67471843 hasPrimaryLocation W674718431 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W1980597078 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2049936380 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2123325543 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2223292281 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2554701541 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2752206162 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2765249468 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2792307024 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2897280189 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2965177365 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2992699481 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3022951665 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3105789222 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3125494565 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3129000716 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3139211669 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3150240323 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W3171562825 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W2625420004 @default.
- W67471843 hasRelatedWork W9900359 @default.
- W67471843 hasVolume "39" @default.
- W67471843 isParatext "false" @default.
- W67471843 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W67471843 magId "67471843" @default.
- W67471843 workType "article" @default.