Author List: Ragu-Nathan, T. S.; Tarafdar, Monideepa; Ragu-Nathan, Bhanu S.; Tu, Qiang;
Information Systems Research, 2008, Volume 19, Issue 4, Page 417-433.
The research reported in this paper studies the phenomenon of technostress, that is, stress experienced by end users of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), and examines its influence on their job satisfaction, commitment to the organization, and intention to stay. Drawing from the Transaction-Based Model of stress and prior research on the effects of ICTs on end users, we first conceptually build a nomological net for technostress to understand the influence of technostress on three variables relating to end users of ICTs: job satisfaction, and organizational and continuance commitment. Because there are no prior instruments to measure constructs related to technostress, we develop and empirically validate two second order constructs: technostress creators (i.e., factors that create stress from the use of ICTs) and technostress inhibitors (i.e., organizational mechanisms that reduce stress from the use of ICTs). We test our conceptual model using data from the responses of 608 end users of ICTs from multiple organizations to a survey questionnaire. Our results, based on structural equation modeling (SEM), show that technostress creators decrease job satisfaction, leading to decreased organizational and continuance commitment, while Technostress inhibitors increase job satisfaction and organizational and continuance commitment. We also find that age, gender, education, and computer confidence influence technostress. The implications of these results and future research directions are discussed.
Keywords: confirmatory factor analysis; continuance commitment; job satisfaction; management of ICTs; organizational commitment; structural equation modeling; survey methods; technostress
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#108 0.186 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested based empirical empirically context paper
#227 0.144 commitment need practitioners studies potential role consider difficult models result importance influence researchers established conduct investigated establishing appear clearly determining
#298 0.142 job employees satisfaction work role turnover employee organizations organizational information ambiguity characteristics personnel stress professionals conflict organization intention variables systems
#278 0.121 website users websites technostress stress time online wait delay aesthetics user model image elements longer waiting appeal attract utility internet
#134 0.085 users end use professionals user organizations applications needs packages findings perform specialists technical computing direct future selection ability help software
#158 0.077 capital social ict communication rural icts cognitive society information well-being relational india societal empirically create develop disadvantaged technologies explore china
#11 0.051 structural pls measurement modeling equation research formative squares partial using indicators constructs construct statistical models researchers latent analysis results sem