论文标题
在家中的工作如何影响协作:在Covid-19期间自然实验中信息工作者的大规模研究
How Work From Home Affects Collaboration: A Large-Scale Study of Information Workers in a Natural Experiment During COVID-19
论文作者
论文摘要
COVID-19大流行对较高的压力水平,工作量增加,新工作流和更多的护理责任等信息工作者产生了广泛的影响。 Covid-19还导致绝大多数信息工作者迅速转移到家里工作(WFH)。这项工作解决的主要问题是:我们可以将WFH对信息工作者协作活动的影响与所有其他因素,尤其是Covid-19的其他影响隔离吗?这很重要,因为将来,WFH可能比大流行之前更普遍。 我们使用社会科学中常用的因果鉴定策略(DID)来控制未观察到的混杂因素并估算WFH的因果效应。我们的分析依赖于衡量Covid-19之前WFH与没有的人之间的变化差异。我们的初步结果表明,平均而言,人们在4月(WFH授权后)花费的时间比2月(WFH前授权)多,但这主要是由于WFH以外的其他因素,例如大流行期间的锁定。归因于WFH的变化特别是朝着相反的方向:更少的协作时间和更多的焦点时间。这种逆转表明了使用因果推断的重要性:简单的分析将导致错误的结论。我们进一步发现,WFH的效果由WFH之前的单个远程协作经验调节。同时,由于WFH,合作的媒介也发生了变化:即时消息的使用更多,而预定的会议则使用了更少的使用。我们讨论设计含义 - 未来WFH如何影响集中的工作,协作工作和创造性工作。
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a wide-ranging impact on information workers such as higher stress levels, increased workloads, new workstreams, and more caregiving responsibilities during lockdown. COVID-19 also caused the overwhelming majority of information workers to rapidly shift to working from home (WFH). The central question this work addresses is: can we isolate the effects of WFH on information workers' collaboration activities from all other factors, especially the other effects of COVID-19? This is important because in the future, WFH will likely to be more common than it was prior to the pandemic. We use difference-in-differences (DiD), a causal identification strategy commonly used in the social sciences, to control for unobserved confounding factors and estimate the causal effect of WFH. Our analysis relies on measuring the difference in changes between those who WFH prior to COVID-19 and those who did not. Our preliminary results suggest that on average, people spent more time on collaboration in April (Post WFH mandate) than in February (Pre WFH mandate), but this is primarily due to factors other than WFH, such as lockdowns during the pandemic. The change attributable to WFH specifically is in the opposite direction: less time on collaboration and more focus time. This reversal shows the importance of using causal inference: a simple analysis would have resulted in the wrong conclusion. We further find that the effect of WFH is moderated by individual remote collaboration experience prior to WFH. Meanwhile, the medium for collaboration has also shifted due to WFH: instant messages were used more, whereas scheduled meetings were used less. We discuss design implications -- how future WFH may affect focused work, collaborative work, and creative work.