Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/123720
Title: Lose at sunrise, but gain at sunset: linking social cyberloafing to psychological detachment, personal life enhancement of work, and mental health
Authors: Mei, Wenjuan
Wu, Jinnan
Zoghbi Manrique Lara, Pablo 
Liu, Lin
He, Ying
Song, Mengmeng
UNESCO Clasification: 6106 Psicología experimental
5311 Organización y dirección de empresas
Keywords: China
Professional-Family Relations
Public Health
Social Interaction
Social Media
Issue Date: 2023
Journal: Work 
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous research has demonstrated that the personal use of social media, i.e., social cyberloafing, is associated with employee mental health. However, the underlying mechanism through which social cyberloafing is related to mental health has received limited attention. OBJECTIVE: Drawing on conservation of resource theory and work/nonwork enhancement literatures, we developed and tested a model that examines health effect of social cyberloafing. As such, employees' social cyberloafing is posited as positively related to psychological detachment and personal life enhancement of work, which in turn would act as mediators that explain why social cyberloafing improves mental health. METHODS: Data from 375 Chinese employees were analyzed to test research hypotheses using the structural equation modeling and bias-corrected bootstrap method with Mplus 7.4. RESULTS: The results found that social cyberloafing is positively related to psychological detachment, but not with personal life enhancement of work. Social cyberloafing was positively related to employees' mental health through both psychological detachment and through psychological detachment and personal life enhancement of work serially. CONCLUSION: Psychological detachment alone and alongside personal life enhancement of work form part of the mechanisms explaining how and why engaging in social cyberloafing is positively associated with employees' mental health. These mechanisms offer insights to organizations into how the mental health of employees can be improved in the digital workplace.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/123720
ISSN: 1875-9270
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-220126
Source: Work (Reading, Mass.) [EISSN 1875-9270], v. 75 (1), p. 339-348, (Enero 2023)
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