AaltonenAAlaimoCKallinikosJ (2021) The making of data commodities: Data analytics as an embedded process. Journal of Management Information Systems38(2): 401–429.
2.
AbelJPBuffCLBurrSA (2016) Social media and the fear of missing out: Scale development and assessment. Journal of Business & Economics Research14(1).
3.
AlaimoCKallinikosJ (2021) Managing by data: Algorithmic categories and organizing. Organization Studies42(9): 1385–1407.
4.
Al-SamarraieHBelloKAAlzahraniAI, et al. (2021) Young users’ social media addiction: Causes, consequences and preventions. Information Technology & People35(7): 2314–2343.
5.
AltD (2015) College students’ academic motivation, media engagement and fear of missing out. Computers in Human Behavior49(6): 111–119.
6.
AnnamoradnejadIHabibiJ (2019) A comprehensive analysis of twitter trending topics. In: 2019 5th international conference on web research (ICWR), Tehran, Iran, 24–25 April, 22–27. New York: IEEE.
7.
ArandaJHandBaigS (2018) Toward “JOMO”: The joy of missing out and the freedom of disconnecting. In: Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services. Association for Computing Machinery, pp. 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1145/3229434.3229468
8.
AraújoBPriorH (2021) Framing political populism: The role of media in framing the election of Jair Bolsonaro. Journalism Practice15(2): 226–242.
9.
AwECXChuahSHW (2021) “Stop the unattainable ideal for an ordinary me!” fostering parasocial relationships with social media influencers: The role of self-discrepancy. Journal of Business Research132(7): 146–157.
10.
BainottiLCaliandroAGandiniA (2021) From archive cultures to ephemeral content, and back: Studying Instagram stories with digital methods. New Media & Society23(12): 3656–3676.
11.
BakerZGKriegerHLeRoyAS (2016) Fear of missing out: Relationships with depression, mindfulness, and physical symptoms. Translational Issues in Psychological Science2(3): 275.
12.
BarlowCAwanI (2016) “You need to be sorted out with a knife”: The attempted online silencing of women and people of Muslim faith within academia. Social Media + Society2(4): 2056305116678896.
13.
BarrosM (2018) Digitally crafting a resistant professional identity: The case of Brazilian ‘dirty’bloggers. Organization25(6): 755–783.
14.
BarryCTSmithEEMurphyMB, et al. (2023) JOMO: Joy of missing out and its association with social media use, self-perception, and mental health. Telematics and Informatics Reports10(8): 100054.
15.
BazinYIslamGParkerM, et al. (2018) The (academic) society of the spectacle (of publication) Unplugged. M@n@gement21(3): 1118–1134.
16.
BergMSeeberBK (2016) The slow professor: Challenging the culture of speed in the academy. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press.
17.
BeyesTHoltRPiasC (2019) The Oxford Handbook of Media, Technology and Organization Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
18.
BhargavaVRVelasquezM (2021) Ethics of the attention economy: The problem of social media addiction. Business Ethics Quarterly31(3): 321–359.
19.
BloomPPVenkateshRDDellonES, et al. (2021) Making social media work for you. Digestive Diseases and Sciences66(7): 2149–2153.
20.
BoudryCDurand-BarthezM (2020) Use of author identifier services (ORCID, ResearcherID) and academic social networks (Academia. edu, ResearchGate) by the researchers of the University of Caen Normandy (France): A case study. PLoS ONE15(9): e0238583.
21.
Bowes-CattonHBrewisJClarkeC, et al. (2020) Talkin’ ’bout a revolution? From quiescence to resistance in the contemporary university. Management Learning51(4): 378–397.
BrivotMGendronY (2011) Beyond panopticism: On the ramifications of surveillance in a contemporary professional setting. Accounting, Organizations and Society36(3): 135–155.
CableMSBartunekJM (2024) Revisiting “Resistance to Change”: Recognizing the tenuous nature of a taken-for-granted construct. Journal of Management Inquiry33(4): 357–362.
26.
CaoXYuL (2019) Exploring the influence of excessive social media use at work: A three-dimension usage perspective. International Journal of Information Management46(1): 83–92.
CasaleSBanchiV (2020) Narcissism and problematic social media use: A systematic literature review. Addictive Behaviors Reports11(2020): 100252.
29.
CastellóIEtterMÅrup NielsenF (2016) Strategies of legitimacy through social media: The networked strategy. Journal of Management Studies53(3): 402–432.
30.
ChanSSVan SoltMCruzRE, et al. (2022) Social media and mindfulness: From the fear of missing out (FOMO) to the joy of missing out (JOMO). Journal of Consumer Affairs56(3): 1312–1331.
31.
CheplyginaVHermansFAlbersC, et al. (2020) Ten simple rules for getting started on Twitter as a scientist. PLoS Computational Biology16(2): e1007513.
32.
ChristinALewisR (2021) The drama of metrics: Status, spectacle, and resistance among YouTube drama creators. Social Media + Society7(1): 2056305121999660.
CusumanoMAGawerAYoffieDB (2019) The Business of Platforms: Strategy in the Age of Digital Competition, Innovation, and Power. New York: Harper Business.
37.
DaileySLHowardKRomingSM, et al. (2020) A biopsychosocial approach to understanding social media addiction. Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies2(2): 158–167.
38.
DaneshjouRShmuylovichLGradaA, et al. (2021) Research techniques made simple: scientific communication using Twitter. Journal of Investigative Dermatology141(7): 1615–1621.
39.
DardotPLavalC (2014) The New Way of the World: On Neoliberal Society. London: Verso Books.
DebordG (1994) The Society of the Spectacle (trans. Nicholson-SmithD). Zone Books.
42.
DelfantiA (2021) The financial market of ideas: A theory of academic social media. Social Studies of Science51(2): 259–276.
43.
DengYFengD (2024) From researchers to academic entrepreneurs: a diachronic analysis of the visual representation of academics in university annual reports. Visual Communication23(4): 583–609.
DuffyBEMeisnerC (2023) Platform governance at the margins: Social media creators’ experiences with algorithmic (in) visibility. Media, Culture & Society45(2): 285–304.
46.
DuffyBEPooleyJD (2017) “Facebook for Academics”: The convergence of self-branding and social media logic on Academia.edu. Social Media + Society3(1): 2056305117696523.
47.
EitanTGazitT (2023) No social media for six hours? The emotional experience of Meta’s global outage according to FoMO, JoMO and internet intensity. Computers in Human Behavior138(4): 107474.
48.
EtterMColleoniEIlliaL, et al. (2018) Measuring organizational legitimacy in social media: Assessing citizens’ judgments with sentiment analysis. Business & Society57(1): 60–97.
49.
EtterMRavasiDColleoniE (2019) Social media and the formation of organizational reputation. Academy of Management Review44(1): 28–52.
50.
FaelensLHoorelbekeKCambierR, et al. (2021) The relationship between Instagram use and indicators of mental health: A systematic review. Computers in Human Behavior Reports4(4): 100121.
51.
FarrowRMoeR (2019) Rethinking the role of the academy: cognitive authority in the age of post-truth. Teaching in Higher Education24(3): 272–287.
52.
FerrariE (2020) Technocracy meets populism: The dominant technological imaginary of Silicon Valley. Communication. Culture & Critique13(1): 121–124.
53.
FlyverbomMReineckeJ (2017) The spectacle and organization studies. Organization Studies38(11): 1625–1643.
GavinMGrabowskiSHassanliN, et al. (2024) ‘Maybe one way forward’: Forging collective collegiality in the neoliberal academy. Management Learning55(3): 386–405.
57.
GroenesteinEWillemsenLVan KoningsbruggenGM, et al. (2024) The relationship between fear of missing out, digital technology use, and psychological well-being: A scoping review of conceptual and empirical issues. PLoS ONE19(10): e0308643.
58.
GroshekJKoc-MichalskaK (2017) Helping populism win? Social media use, filter bubbles, and support for populist presidential candidates in the 2016 US election campaign. Information, Communication & Society20(9): 1389–1407.
59.
GruberT (2014) Academic sell-out: how an obsession with metrics and rankings is damaging academia. Journal of Marketing for Higher Education24(2): 165–177.
60.
HafermalzE (2021) Out of the panopticon and into exile: Visibility and control in distributed new culture organizations. Organization Studies42(5): 697–717.
61.
HanBC (2015) The Transparency Society. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
62.
HanBC (2017a) In the Swarm: Digital Prospects, vol. 3. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
63.
HanBC (2017b) Psychopolitics: Neoliberalism and New Technologies of Power. London: Verso Books.
Jean KenixL (2009) Blogs as alternative. Journal of Computer-mediated Communication14(4): 790–822.
68.
JüngerJFähnrichB (2020) Does really no one care? Analyzing the public engagement of communication scientists on Twitter. New Media & Society22(3): 387–408.
KlarSKrupnikovYRyanJB, et al. (2020) Using social media to promote academic research: Identifying the benefits of twitter for sharing academic work. PLoS ONE15(4): e0229446.
71.
LacerdaDSSantosRDCT (2023) The role of social network platforms for discursive legitimation: Unveiling neoliberalism behind the discourse on public universities. M@n@gement26(4): 52–67.
72.
LehdonvirtaV (2022) Cloud Empires: How Digital Platforms are Overtaking the State and How We Can Regain Control. Boston, MA: MIT Press.
73.
LuRYangQ (2012) Trend analysis of news topics on twitter. International Journal of Machine Learning and Computing2(3): 327.
74.
MaddoxJ (2024) A social media professor, mediated: Being subject, object, and spectator in# BamaRush TikTok. Platforms & Society1: 29768624241306051. https://doi.org/10.1177/29768624241306051
MancaS (2018) ResearchGate and Academia.edu as networked socio-technical systems for scholarly communication: a literature review. Research in Learning Technology26(2018): 1–16.
77.
MandalakiEPéreztsM (2023) Abjection overruled! Time to dismantle sexist cyberbullying in academia. Organization30(1): 168–180.
78.
McCainJLCampbellWK (2018) Narcissism and social media use: A meta-analytic review. Psychology of Popular Media Culture7(3): 308.
79.
McCarthyIPBogersML (2023) The open academic: Why and how business academics should use social media to be more “open” and impactful. Business Horizons66(1): 153–166.
Mula-FalcónJViseuSda SilvaR (2025) Early Career Academic’s Associations: A Study of Resistance and Empowerment on Social Media. Higher Education Policy38(2): 386–407.
82.
NarteyM (2024) Women’s voice, agency and resistance in Nigerian blogs: A feminist critical discourse analysis. Journal of Gender Studies33(4): 418–430.
83.
OdellJ (2019) How to do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy. New Jersey: Melville House.
84.
O’NeilC (2017) Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy. New York: Crown.
85.
O’NeilC (2022) The Shame Machine: Who Profits in the New Age of Humiliation. New York: Crown.
PowellKHaslamAPrasadV (2022) The Kardashian Index: a study of researchers’ opinions on twitter 2014–2021. Scientometrics127(4): 1923–1930.
89.
RanjbarPKhosrojavidMSoltani ShalR (2025) The joy of missing out survey (JOMOS): Adaptation and psychometric evaluation among Iranian university students. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment: 1–21.
90.
RaufAA (2021) New moralities for new media? Assessing the role of social media in acts of terror and providing points of deliberation for business ethics. Journal of Business Ethics170(2): 229–251.
RobertsJADavidME (2020) The social media party: Fear of missing out (FoMO), social media intensity, connection, and well-being. International Journal of Human–computer Interaction36(4): 386–392.
93.
RodriguesFZiadeNJatuworaprukK, et al. (2023) The impact of social media on vaccination: A narrative review. Journal of Korean Medical Science38(40): e326.
94.
SaidWE (1994) Representations of the Intellectual: The 1993 Reith Lectures. London: Vintage Books.
95.
SathishCHarzingAW (2025) Let’s form a positive academia collective transformation: Re-imagining our academic values and interactions. Management Learning. Epub ahead of print 17July. DOI: 10.1177/13505076251351089.
96.
SchaakeM (2024) The Tech Coup: How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley (In The Tech Coup). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
97.
ScottSVOrlikowskiWJ (2012) Reconfiguring relations of accountability: Materialization of social media in the travel sector. Accounting, Organizations and Society37(1): 26–40.
98.
SewellG (1998) The discipline of teams: The control of team-based industrial work through electronic and peer surveillance. Administrative Science Quarterly43(2): 397–428.
99.
ShermanLEHernandezLMGreenfieldPM, et al. (2018) What the brain ‘Likes’: Neural correlates of providing feedback on social media. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience13(7): 699–707.
100.
SiebertMSienaLMIoannidisJP (2023) Twitter and Mastodon presence of highly-cited scientists. bioRxiv, 2023-04. DOI: 10.1101/2023.04.23.537950.
101.
SokolovaKKefiH (2020) Instagram and YouTube bloggers promote it, why should I buy? How credibility and parasocial interaction influence purchase intentions. Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services53(1): 101742.
102.
StefanoudisPVBiancaniLMCambronero-SolanoS, et al. (2021) Moving conferences online: Lessons learned from an international virtual meeting. Proceedings of the Royal Society B288(1961): 20211769.
103.
SteffensMSDunnAGLeaskJ, et al. (2020) Using social media for vaccination promotion: Practices and challenges. Digital Health6(2020): 1–9.
104.
StevensonM (2017) From hypertext to hype and back again: Exploring the roots of social media in early web culture. In: BurgeesJMarwickAEPoellT (eds) The SAGE Handbook of Social Media. London: Sage, 69–88.
105.
StengersI (2018 [2013]) Another Science Is Possible: A Manifesto for Slow Science (trans. MueckeS). Cambridge: Polity Press.
106.
SusskindJ (2022) The Digital Republic: On Freedom and Democracy in the 21st Century. London: Bloomsbury publishing.
ThompsonPMcDonaldPO’ConnorP (2020) Employee dissent on social media and organizational discipline. Human Relations73(5): 631–652.
109.
Trittin-UlbrichHGlozerS (2024) #Knowyourworth: How influencers commercialise meaningful work. Human Relations77(12): 1811–1843.
110.
Trittin-UlbrichHSchererAGMunroI, et al. (2021) Exploring the dark and unexpected sides of digitalization: Toward a critical agenda. Organization28(1): 8–25.
111.
Van ZoonenWVerhoevenJWVliegenthartR (2017) Understanding the consequences of public social media use for work. European Management Journal35(5): 595–605.
112.
WeberM (2004) The Vocation Lectures: Science as a Vocation; Politics as a Vocation (trans. LivingstoneR). Hackett Publishing Company.
113.
WrightRR (2023) A doctor who academy for dystopian times. In: HarmesMKScullyR (eds) Academia and Higher Learning in Popular Culture. Riverside, CA: Palgrave Macmillan, 215–234.
114.
WuWZhangJJoN (2025) Fear of missing out and online social anxiety in university students: Mediation by irrational procrastination and media multitasking. Behavioral Sciences15(1): 84.
ZuboffS (2019) The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power. New York, NY: PublicAffairs.
117.
ZuboffS (2022) Surveillance capitalism or democracy? The death match of institutional orders and the politics of knowledge in our information civilization. Organization Theory3(3): 26317877221129290.