{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/69583a71c4b2cc952cc3bf93/69583a7c18c941d6d6c5a790?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Technostress","description":"<p>PTSD. Burnout. Depression. That’s what you get from a too stressful workplace. And — employers take note — you also get reduced commitment to work, and much higher costs.</p><p>As workplaces have navigated the COVID pandemic, new technologies have amped those stresses to 11. Bossware. Tattleware. After-hours nastiness on Slack. Now there’s a whole different kind of “technostress” wearing on warehouse and retail workers, whose every movement is tracked and rated by algorithms.</p><p>Researchers are only beginning to study the impact “technostress” has on workers, from toxic interpersonal relationships to “email apnea” Tech is here to stay — but how can we foster healthier, less “technostress”-inducing work cultures? </p><p><strong>Guests</strong></p><ul>\n<li>\n<strong>Roxanne Felig</strong>, doctoral student at the University of South Florida, who was cyber bullied online after publishing her first major research paper — and publicizing it on TikTok.</li>\n<li>\n<strong>Adrian Ugalde</strong>, retail worker at a big box store in LA</li>\n<li>\n<strong>Maddie Swenson</strong>, who quit her remote job as a creative director because of the stress of being monitored with Bossware.</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://willamette.edu/mba/faculty-research/faculty/nixon/index.html\"><strong>Ashley Nixon</strong></a>, Associate Professor of Human Resource Management and Organizational Behavior at Willamette University.</li>\n<li><br></li>\n</ul><p><strong>Resources</strong></p><ul>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://datasociety.net/library/explainer-workplace-monitoring-surveillance/\">Workplace Monitoring and Surveillance</a>, Data and Society, 2019</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7662498/\">Technostress Dark Side of Technology in the Workplace: A Scientometric Analysis</a>, Bondanini et al, 2020.</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://asset-pdf.scinapse.io/prod/2772127651/2772127651.pdf\">Technostress: Implications for Adults in the Workplace,</a> Atanasoff &amp; Venable, 2017</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6821672/\">Workplace bullying jeopardizes employees’ life satisfaction: the roles of job anxiety and insomnia</a>, Nauman, Malik &amp; Jalil, 2019</li>\n<li>T<a href=\"https://www.newamerica.org/weekly/workplace-surveillance-technology-boom/\">he Workplace-Surveillance Technology Boom</a>, Natalie Chyi, New America Weekly, 2020</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://lindastone.net/2014/11/24/are-you-breathing-do-you-have-email-apnea/\">Are you Breathing? Do you have email apnea?</a> Linda Stone, 2014</li>\n</ul>","author_name":"New America"}