Current research projects:
Multi-tasking, attention focus, and digital media use: Over the last several years we have been studying how digital media affects people’s lives. Rather than bring people into a laboratory, I view the real world as a living laboratory--I go where people live, study, and work, to study them as they go about their normal activities. Digital media use affects people’s mood, stress, and behavior quite significantly. In particular, people experience disruptions when working with digital media due to multi-tasking and interruptions. We have studied people in domains ranging from information workers in the workplace to college students in their academic life. We use an array of sensors to measure behavior: stress, mood, focus, interaction, and computer and phone activity. We are exploring how IT can support information organization in a way consistent with a more natural way of organizing work, in terms of thematically connected units of work, or what we term working spheres.
Some selected publications:
Multitasking in the Digital Age, Morgan Claypool (2015). (Book)
Shining (blue) light on creative ability. Proceedings of ACM UbiComp 2016, ACM Press (with Saeed Abdullah, Mary Czerwinski, and Paul Johns).
Sleep debt in student life: Online attention focus, Facebook and mood. Proceedings of ACM CHI 2016, ACM Press (with Yiran Wang, Melissa Niiya, and Stephanie Reich).
Email duration, batching, and self-interruption: Patterns of email use on productivity and stress. Proceedings of ACM CHI 2016, ACM Press. (With Shamsi Iqbal, Mary Czerwinski, Paul Johns, and Akane Sano).
Neurotics can’t focus: An in situ study of multitasking in the workplace. Proceedings of ACM CHI 2016, ACM Press. (With Shamsi Iqbal, Mary Czerwinski, Paul Johns, and Akane Sano).
Coming of Age (Digitally): An Ecological View of Social Media Use among College Students. Proceedings of CSCW 2015, ACM Press. (with Yiran Wang, Melissa Niiya, Stephanie Reich, and Mark Warschauer)
Focused, aroused, but so distractible: A temporal perspective on multitasking and communications. Proceedings of CSCW 2015, ACM Press. (with Shamsi Iqbal, Mary Czerwinski and Paul Johns) Honorable Mention for Best Paper.
Bored Mondays and Focused Afternoons: The Rhythm of Attention and Online Activity in the Workplace
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2014 (with Shamsi Iqbal, Mary Czerwinski and Paul Johns)
Honorable Mention for Best Paper.
Stress and multitasking in everyday college life: An empirical study of online activity
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2014 (with Yiran Wang and Melissa Niiya)
Honorable Mention for Best Paper.
Capturing the Mood: Facebook and Face-to-Face Encounters in the Workplace.
Proceedings of CSCW 2014 (with Shamsi Iqbal, Mary Czerwinski and Paul Johns
Most Liked, Fewest Friends: Patterns of Enterprise Social Media Use
Proceedings of CSCW 2014 (with Ido Guy, Shiri Kramer-Davidson, Michal Jacovi)
Honorable Mention for Best Paper.
“A Pace not dictated by electrons”: An empirical study of work without email
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2012 (with Stephen Voida and Armand Cardello)
Honorable Mention for Best Paper.
Why do I keep interrupting myself? Environment, habit, and self-interruption
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2011 (with Laura Dabbish and Victor Gonzalez)
The Japanese Garden: Task awareness for collaborative multitasking
Proceedings of ACM Group 2010 (with Hideto Yuzawa)
The Cost of Interrupted Work: More Speed and Stress.
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2008 (with Daniela Gudith and Ulrich Klocke)
Communication Chains and Multitasking.
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2008 (with Norman Su)
Workplace connectors as Facilitators for Work.
Proceedings of Communities and Technologies (C&T’07) (with Norman Su and Stewart Sutton)
No Task Left Behind? Examining the Nature of Fragmented Work.
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2005 (with Victor Gonzalez and Justin Harris)
Managing currents of work: Multi-tasking among multiple collaborations.
Proceedings of ECSCW’05 (the European Conference of Computer-supported Cooperative Work) (with Victor Gonzalez)
"Constant, Constant, Multi-tasking Craziness”: Managing Multiple Working Spheres.
Proceedings of ACM CHI 2004 (with Victor Gonzalez)