Authors
Christa Hubers, Tim Schwanen, Martin Dijst
Publication date
2006/11/9
Journal
The 2nd International Specialist Meeting on ICT, Everyday Life and Urban Change
Pages
9-12
Description
A popular notion in contemporary social science is that the Internet and other communication and information technologies (ICTs) facilitate the fragmentation of daily activities across times and spaces, thereby blurring the boundaries between the previously separated life domains of work, care and leisure. However, a clear conceptualization of what fragmentation is and how it can be measured empirically has been lacking. As a consequence, hardly any empirical evidence has been provided for these notions. The goal of this paper is twofold:(1) to propose a methodology for measuring activity fragmentation; and (2) to assess temporal fragmentation empirically and consider its associations with ICT usage, gender and residential location. The proposed methodological framework covers three main dimensions of fragmentation: the number of fragments; the distribution of the sizes of fragments; and the spatial and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Hubers, T Schwanen, M Dijst - The 2nd International Specialist Meeting on ICT …, 2006