000K utf8 0100 1794158723 1100 2022$c2022-02-12 1500 eng 2051 10.3390/ijerph19042061 3000 Döring, Nicola 3010 Fiedler, Markus 3010 Moor, Katrien De 3010 Raake, Alexander 3010 Schoenenberg, Katrin 4000 Videoconference fatigue: a conceptual analysis [Döring, Nicola] 4060 20 Seiten 4209 Videoconferencing (VC) is a type of online meeting that allows two or more participants from different locations to engage in live multi-directional audio-visual communication and collaboration (e.g., via screen sharing). The COVID-19 pandemic has induced a boom in both private and professional videoconferencing in the early 2020s that elicited controversial public and academic debates about its pros and cons. One main concern has been the phenomenon of videoconference fatigue. The aim of this conceptual review article is to contribute to the conceptual clarification of VC fatigue. We use the popular and succinct label “Zoom fatigue” interchangeably with the more generic label “videoconference fatigue” and define it as the experience of fatigue during and/or after a videoconference, regardless of the specific VC system used. We followed a structured eight-phase process of conceptual analysis that led to a conceptual model of VC fatigue with four key causal dimensions: (1) personal factors, (2) organizational factors, (3) technological factors, and (4) environmental factors. We present this 4D model describing the respective dimensions with their sub-dimensions based on theories, available evidence, and media coverage. The 4D-model is meant to help researchers advance empirical research on videoconference fatigue. 4950 https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042061$xR$3Volltext$534 4961 http://uri.gbv.de/document/gvk:ppn:1794158723 5051 610 5051 620 5051 690 5550 Big Blue Button 5550 Cisco Webex 5550 computer-mediated communication 5550 COVID-19 pandemic 5550 exhaustion 5550 face-to-face-communication 5550 Microsoft Teams 5550 Skype 5550 video call 5550 Zoom