Abstract

In the light of the information age, information overload research in new areas (e.g., social media, virtual collaboration) rises rapidly in many fields of research in business administration with a variety of methods and subjects. This review article analyzes the development of information overload literature in business administration and related interdisciplinary fields and provides a comprehensive and overarching overview using a bibliometric literature analysis combined with a snowball sampling approach. For the last decade, this article reveals research directions and bridges of literature in a wide range of fields of business administration (e.g., accounting, finance, health management, human resources, innovation management, international management, information systems, marketing, manufacturing, or organizational science). This review article identifies the major papers of various research streams to capture the pulse of the information overload-related research and suggest new questions that could be addressed in the future and identifies concrete open gaps for further research. Furthermore, this article presents a new framework for structuring information overload issues which extends our understanding of influence factors and effects of information overload in the decision-making process.

Highlights

  • Information overload is a decisive factor driving negative ‘‘work environments [that] are killing productivity, dampening creativity, and making us unhappy’’ (Dean and Webb 2011)

  • This review addresses a limitation noted by Eppler and Mengis (2004), namely that research focusing on information overload from other perspectives is not addressed adequately

  • Following Eppler and Mengis (2004), I searched for the keywords ‘‘information overload’’, ‘‘information load’’, ‘‘cognitive load’’, and ‘‘cognitive overload’’ with the following conditions: written in English, published after 2004, research articles/papers, peer-reviewed, published in journals

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Summary

Introduction

Information overload is a decisive factor driving negative ‘‘work environments [that] are killing productivity, dampening creativity, and making us unhappy’’ (Dean and Webb 2011). Two radical innovations supported the rapid increase in the availability of information and the decrease in information search-related costs: Gutenberg’s printing innovations and the rise of information technology (IT). Before these radical innovations, the issue of information overload was limited to a wealthy and privileged elite. In the information age, information overload research in new areas (e.g., social media, virtual collaboration) seems to be rising rapidly (Dean and Webb 2011; Hemp 2009; Kolfschoten and Brazier 2013; Shapiro and Varian 2013). An actual review of information overload in today’s information age is still missing

Google Scholar
Working definition of information overload
Methodology
Descriptive results of the bibliometric analysis
Publications in business research-relevant journals
Authorship
Methodological approaches and underlying theories
New conceptual model for information overload-related research
Recent trends and add-ons in information overload literature 2005–2017
Conclusions
Full Text
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