Using time diary evidence on change in the frequency and distribution of activities from UK time diary data over the 15 years from the turn of the 21st century, we assess whether the thesis of ‘the speed-up society’ is manifested in an increase in time intensity in people’s daily lives. Comparing indictors like time fragmentation, multitasking and ICT use, to respondents’ reports of how rushed they normally feel, we find no evidence that time pressure is increasing, or that ICT use is associated with greater feelings of time pressure. Rather, we find consistent cross-sectional differentials in our measures of time intensity by gender and occupational status, supporting the idea of relative stasis in the underlying social inequalities of tim...
How did people change their behavior over the different phases of the UK COVID-19 restrictions, and ...
Free time has the potential to reduce time pressures, yet previous studies paradoxically report incr...
n an editorial for this journal a decade ago, then-Editor-in-Chief Fred Phillips asserted that socia...
Using time diary evidence on change in the frequency and distribution of activities from UK time dia...
The paper addresses some macro-sociological questions about changes in broad categories of time-use....
The paper addresses some macro-sociological questions about changes in broad categories of time-use....
[Extract] Theories of internal clock agree that variations in individual external stimuli may affect...
Recent years have witnessed an increasing interest in the use of new technologies for time-use data ...
It is commonly claimed that ubiquitous connectivity erodes the boundaries that once separated work f...
It is commonly claimed that ubiquitous connectivity erodes the boundaries that once separated work f...
The impact of the Internet is put into the context of long-term, time-use trends in the United Kingd...
Changes in economy and society since the early nineteenth century have often been associated with th...
Recent years have witnessed a steady growth of time-use research, driven by the increased research a...
OBJECTIVES: Perceptions of time are shaped by sociohistorical factors. Specifically, economic growth...
Scholars are beginning to question the impacts of the Internet for the conceptualization of time and...
How did people change their behavior over the different phases of the UK COVID-19 restrictions, and ...
Free time has the potential to reduce time pressures, yet previous studies paradoxically report incr...
n an editorial for this journal a decade ago, then-Editor-in-Chief Fred Phillips asserted that socia...
Using time diary evidence on change in the frequency and distribution of activities from UK time dia...
The paper addresses some macro-sociological questions about changes in broad categories of time-use....
The paper addresses some macro-sociological questions about changes in broad categories of time-use....
[Extract] Theories of internal clock agree that variations in individual external stimuli may affect...
Recent years have witnessed an increasing interest in the use of new technologies for time-use data ...
It is commonly claimed that ubiquitous connectivity erodes the boundaries that once separated work f...
It is commonly claimed that ubiquitous connectivity erodes the boundaries that once separated work f...
The impact of the Internet is put into the context of long-term, time-use trends in the United Kingd...
Changes in economy and society since the early nineteenth century have often been associated with th...
Recent years have witnessed a steady growth of time-use research, driven by the increased research a...
OBJECTIVES: Perceptions of time are shaped by sociohistorical factors. Specifically, economic growth...
Scholars are beginning to question the impacts of the Internet for the conceptualization of time and...
How did people change their behavior over the different phases of the UK COVID-19 restrictions, and ...
Free time has the potential to reduce time pressures, yet previous studies paradoxically report incr...
n an editorial for this journal a decade ago, then-Editor-in-Chief Fred Phillips asserted that socia...