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      End-user frustrations and failures in digital technology: exploring the role of Fear of Missing Out, Internet addiction and personality

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      Heliyon
      Elsevier
      Psychology

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          Abstract

          The present study aimed to explore the potential relationship between individual differences in responses to failures with digital technology. In total, 630 participants (50% male) aged between 18–68 years ( M = 41.41, SD = 14.18) completed an online questionnaire. This included a self-report, response to failures in digital technology scale, a measure of Fear of Missing Out, Internet addiction, and the BIG-5 personality traits. Fear of Missing Out, Internet addiction, extraversion, and neuroticism all served as significant positive predictors for maladaptive responses to failures in digital technology. Agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness acted as significant negative predictors for maladaptive responses to failures in digital technology. The responses to failures in digital technology scale presented good internal reliability, with items loading onto four key factors, these being; ‘maladaptive responses’, ‘adaptive responses’, ‘external support and venting frustrations’, and ‘anger and resignation’. The findings are discussed in the context of the end user experience, particularly where individual differences are seen to influence the level of frustration arising from a failure. The findings are also seen as a potential route for reducing the negative impact of failures in digital technology, particularly in the context of organisational productivity and responses to malicious cyberattacks.

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          Most cited references30

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          A second generation little jiffy

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            Machines and Mindlessness: Social Responses to Computers

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              Frustration-aggression hypothesis: examination and reformulation.

              Examines the Dollard et al. (1939) frustration-aggression hypothesis. The original formulation's main proposition is limited to interference with an expected attainment of a desired goal on hostile (emotional) aggression. Although some studies have yielded negative results, others support the core proposition. Frustrations can create aggressive inclinations even when they are not arbitrary or aimed at the subject personally. Interpretations and attributions can be understood partly in terms of the original analysis but they can also influence the unpleasantness of the thwarting. A proposed revision of the 1939 model holds that frustrations generate aggressive inclinations to the degree that they arouse negative affect. Evidence regarding the aggressive consequences of aversive events is reviewed, and Berkowitz's cognitive-neoassociationistic model is summarized.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Elsevier
                2405-8440
                01 November 2018
                November 2018
                01 November 2018
                : 4
                : 11
                : e00872
                Affiliations
                [1]De Montfort University, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH, UK
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. lhadlington@ 123456dmu.ac.uk
                Article
                S2405-8440(18)34623-1 e00872
                10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00872
                6223105
                74e03c21-78c3-4735-867c-1c026b9535a3
                © 2018 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 9 August 2018
                : 31 August 2018
                : 16 October 2018
                Categories
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                psychology
                psychology

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