More Than Defense in Daily Experience of Privacy: The Functions of Privacy in Digital and Physical Environments
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Citazione:
Lombardi, D. B., Ciceri, M. R., More Than Defense in Daily Experience of Privacy: The Functions of Privacyin Digital and Physical Environments, <>, 2016; 2016 vol.12 (12): 115-136. [doi:10.5964/ejop.v12i1.948] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/79040]
Abstract:
The purpose of the current study was to investigate the experience of privacy, focusing on its functional role in personal well-being. A sample
(N = 180) comprised subjects between 18 and 50 years of age were asked to spontaneously provide accounts of their experiences with privacy
and answer close-ended questions to acquire a description of a daily experience of privacy. The results showed the importance attributed to
the function of privacy related to the “defense from social threats”, and the twofold function of privacy related to an “achieved state of privacy”,
in the terms of both “system maintenance” and “system development”. The results also shed light on the role of the environment in shaping
one’s experience of privacy. Specifically, the participants recognized more easily the function of defense from threats related to seeking privacy
while interacting in digital environments, whereas they seemed to benefit from positive functions related to an achieved state of privacy in
physical environments. The findings sustain the notion of privacy as a supportive condition for some psychological processes involved in the
positive human functioning and confirm previous studies conducted on the role of privacy in human well-being.
(N = 180) comprised subjects between 18 and 50 years of age were asked to spontaneously provide accounts of their experiences with privacy
and answer close-ended questions to acquire a description of a daily experience of privacy. The results showed the importance attributed to
the function of privacy related to the “defense from social threats”, and the twofold function of privacy related to an “achieved state of privacy”,
in the terms of both “system maintenance” and “system development”. The results also shed light on the role of the environment in shaping
one’s experience of privacy. Specifically, the participants recognized more easily the function of defense from threats related to seeking privacy
while interacting in digital environments, whereas they seemed to benefit from positive functions related to an achieved state of privacy in
physical environments. The findings sustain the notion of privacy as a supportive condition for some psychological processes involved in the
positive human functioning and confirm previous studies conducted on the role of privacy in human well-being.
Tipologia CRIS:
Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
Keywords:
privacy,; well-being,; positive experience,; person-environment interaction
Elenco autori:
Lombardi, Debora Benedetta; Ciceri, Maria Rita
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