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Öğe From IT Mindfulness to ICT-Enabled Innovation: A Moderated Moderated-Mediation Model with Techno-Invasion, Cyberslacking and Employee Age(Taylor & Francis Inc, 2025) Gugercin, Utku; Kuss, Daria J.As organizations increasingly utilize ICT to foster innovation, understanding the role of individual dynamics and organizational arrangements becomes a necessity to maximize the potential of ICT for innovation. Drawing on affordance theory, the present research aims to examine whether and how IT mindfulness serves as a precursor to ICT-enabled innovation, investigating the mediating effect of techno-invasion and the moderating roles of cyber-slacking and age. Data from 358 public school teachers revealed that IT mindfulness plays a supportive and techno-invasion a constraining role on ICT-enabled innovation. Moreover, the results showed that minor cyberslacking moderates the indirect effect of IT mindfulness and the three-way interaction among techno-invasion, minor cyberslacking and age in explaining ICT-enabled innovation was significant. The research offers insights into the multifaceted dynamics of innovation, emphasizing that technology alone does not ensure innovation; human and organizational factors are essential as well. Furthermore, the results provide insight into the dual role of cyberslacking, as it can either foster or impede innovation.Öğe IT-Induced Antecedents of Cyberslacking: A Sequential Analysis Within the Stressor-Strain-Outcome Model and Coping Framework(Taylor & Francis Inc, 2025) Gugercin, Utku; Kuss, Daria J.Despite extensive research on cyberslacking, the indirect mechanisms through which strain and coping strategies drive it remain underexplored. Grounded in multiple theoretical frameworks, this study employs the stressor-strain-outcome (SSO) model to explain how IT-based work-home conflict (stressor) leads to cyberslacking (outcome) via techno-exhaustion (strain) and Internet addiction (coping response). A survey of 493 white-collar employees was analyzed using structural equation modeling. Results confirmed that IT-based work-home conflict increases cyberslacking solely indirectly through techno-exhaustion and Internet addiction, indicating that cyberslacking surfaces as a result of a sequential coping response. Specifically, Internet addiction emerges as a response to techno-exhaustion and is positively associated with cyberslacking. Overall, this study positions cyberslacking as a coping mechanism rather than a pure deviant behavior. It also introduces an updated scale for measuring contemporary cyberslacking behaviors. Collectively, the findings show the dual role of ICT in human-computer interaction, creating strain and providing coping opportunities simultaneously.









