User:Ginnerz06/Digital hoarding
Digital hoarding (also known as e-hoarding, e-clutter, datahoarding, digital pack-rattery or cyberhoarding) is defined by researchers as an emerging sub-type of hoarding disorder characterized by individuals collecting excessive digital material which to those individuals experiencing stress and disorganization.[1] Digital hoarding takes place in electronic environments where information is stored digitally. The term gained popularity among online forums and in the media before receiving scholarly attention.[2] Research indicates there may be correlation between individuals who exhibit physical and digital hoarding behaviors[3][4] and acknowledges there is a lack of psychological literature on the subject.[5] Several studies suggest the main influential factors of digital hoarding are related to issues reduced costs for storing data, individuals lacking time to curate accumulated data, the perceived lifespan of data and emotional attachment to digital assets. The studies conducted to examine digital hoarding are limited in scope as this is an emerging area of study. There is a lack of agreement among researchers about whether digital hoarding is a condition to be treated rather than a normal human activity.[6]
As a medical condition
[edit]The increasing availability of digital materials coincides with increased opportunity for people to accumulate digital materials. Van Bennekom et al. introduced "digital hoarding" in scientific literature in 2015 after reading descriptions of it published on the internet by both patients and professionals. They define it as "the accumulation of digital files to the point of loss of perspective, which eventually results in stress and disorganisation."[1] Since the publication of this case study, several attempts have been made to study digital hoarding. In each of these publications there are clear knowledge gaps identified citing the need of more research to better understand digital hoarding.[2][7][8]
Sweeten et al. conducted one of the first research projects in 2018 that focused on digital hoarding, examining characteristics and potential problems associated with digital hoarding.[2] They identified five barriers to deleting digital data including: keeping data for the future/just in case, keeping data as evidence, lazy/time consuming, emotional attachment to data, not my server-not my problem. They also identified four problems associated with accumulating excessive amounts of data including: effects on productivity, effects on psychological wellbeing, cybersecurity issues, links with physical hoarding. Participants in this study were frequently surprised by how much data they accumulated yet still experienced difficulties when discussing discarding that information. This study of digital hoarding was limited by a small sample of participants and the absence of an agreed upon standardized scale to measure digital hoarding behavior. Bozaci and Gokdeniz's study published two years after Sweeten et al.'s experience similar limitations including a small sample of participants, but instead focused on developing a measurement tool and scale to utilize when assessing digital hoarding behavior. They developed a digital photograph hoarding scale (DPHS) specifically to measure the hoarding of digital photographs, suggesting the scale could be adapted to measure the hoarding of other digital assets such as video and music.[7]
Vitale et al. published another early research project in 2018 investigating digital data perceptions among a small sample of individuals with diverse backgrounds. This research focused on what digital items individuals held onto for multiple years and the criteria used to determine why and how those digital items were considered worth saving. The researchers used hoarding and minimalism as two extremes to discuss the spectrum of tendencies uncovered during interviews as they found these tendencies required context for understanding and not fitted for binary categorization.[8]
In addition to bringing attention to hoarding tendencies, Vitale et al.'s research compared and contrasted these tendencies as they relate to identity construction.[8] Dillon suggests within the spectrum Vitale et al. established with hoarding and minimalism as extremes at each end, most human engagement with digital and physical objects falls in between those two extremes.[6]
Published studies focused on digital hoarding include adult participants and no children. One researcher in search of ways to apply what is known about adult hoarding to identifying and treating hoarding behavior exhibited by children suggested further research into digital hoarding behavior among children.[9]
Influential factors
[edit]The limited studies focused on examining digital hoarding behavior identified the following influential factors as having significant impact on an individual's decision to accumulate digital material:
- Some individuals experience anxiety when faced with disposing of digital items, particularly if they fear losing something important.[2]
- Many digital hoarders don't know how to organize their digital content or aren't in the habit of doing so, and they lack a methodology for determining which content is worth keeping.[10]
- Natural creative motives such as the desire to share ideas.[11]
- Perceptions around the need or usefulness of digital assets in the future
- Lacking motivation to manage digital assets[2]
- Time constraints
- Keeping all of one's digital files requires less time and effort than evaluating and deleting them[8]
Researchers cite the following developments in technology as playing a role in enabling the increased accumulation of digital material:
- Existence of hardware and software for creating digital content[11]
- Development of digital storage capacity[12]
Research limitations
[edit]The focus of existing studies on digital hoarding are narrow in scope, typically focusing on determining what differences and similarities exist between people's reasons to accumulate digital material in a work setting vs private setting. This boundary between work vs personal information spaces is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain prompting some archivists to suggest work and personal information could merge into personal record keeping. Other limitations include small sample research groups and a lack of agreed upon metrics to fully measure the aspects of digital hoarding behavior.[13][14]
Environmental impact
[edit]From the few studies that have specifically examined digital hoarding, participants cite their reasoning for saving many digital files is due to the lack of physical space it takes up.[2][5] Siddick et al. examined carbon and water footprints of data centers located in the United States noting a lack of transparency surrounding the role of data centers in handling data, obscuring the environmental implications of data centers from the public eye.[15]
References
[edit]- ^ a b van Bennekom, M. J., Blom, R. M., Vulink, N., & Denys, D. (2015). A case of digital hoarding. BMJ Case Reports. https://doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2015-210814
- ^ a b c d e f g Sweeten, G., Sillence, E., & Neave, N. (2018). Digital hoarding behaviours: Underlying motivations and potential negative consequences. Computers in Human Behavior, 85, 54–60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2018.03.031
- ^ Centre for Research and Evidence on Security. (2020). Cybersecurity Risks of Digital Hoarding Behaviours. https://crestresearch.ac.uk/types/report/
- ^ Kim, S. (2013). Personal Digital Archives: Preservation of documents, preservation of self (dissertation). University of Texas at Austin.
- ^ a b Thorpe, S., Bolster, A., & Neave, N. (2019). Exploring aspects of the cognitive behavioural model of physical hoarding in relation to digital hoarding behaviours. DIGITAL HEALTH. https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207619882172
- ^ a b Dillon, A. (2019). Collecting as routine human behavior: Personal identity and control in the material and Digital World. Information & Culture, 54(3), 255–280. https://doi.org/10.7560/ic54301
- ^ a b Bozacı, İ., & Gökdeniz, İ. (2020). Development of a digital photo hoarding scale: A research with undergraduate students. Management Science Letters, 2193–2200. https://doi.org/10.5267/j.msl.2020.3.017
- ^ a b c d Vitale, F., Janzen, I., & McGrenere, J. (2018). Hoarding and minimalism. Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. https://doi.org/10.1145/3173574.3174161
- ^ Whomsley, S. R. (2020). An overview of hoarding difficulties in children and adolescents. Children Australia, 45(3), 182–185. https://doi.org/10.1017/cha.2020.29
- ^ a b Gormley, C. J., & Gormley, S. J. (2012). Data hoarding and information clutter: The impact on cost, life span of data, effectiveness, sharing, productivity, and knowledge management culture. Issues in Information Systems, 13(2), 90-95.
- ^ a b Williams, P., Leighton John, J., & Rowland, I. (2009). The personal curation of digital objects: A lifecycle approach. Aslib Proceedings, 61(4), 340-363.
- ^ Schüll, N. D. (2018). Digital containment and its discontents. History and Anthropology, 29(1), 42-48.
- ^ Lee, C. A. (2011). I, Digital: Personal Collections in the Digital Era. Society of American Archivists.
- ^ Harris, V. (2001). On the back of a tiger: deconstructive possibilities in ’Evidence of me’. Archives & Manuscripts, 29(1), 8-21. Retrieved from https://publications.archivists.org.au/index.php/asa/article/view/8881
- ^ Siddik, M. A., Shehabi, A., & Marston, L. (2021). The environmental footprint of data centers in the United States. Environmental Research Letters, 16(6), 8–21. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abfba1