数字时代的网络化问题:网络化的、有界的和有限的个体在生命历程的不同阶段是如何联系在一起的?

IF 1.4 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
B. Wellman, Anabel Quan-Haase, Molly-Gloria Harper
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引用次数: 10

摘要

摘要我们对加拿大多伦多东约克区的101名参与者进行了深入采访,以了解数字媒体如何影响处于人生不同阶段的人们的社交联系,尤其是网络个人主义。尽管所有年龄段的人都将数字媒体的使用与面对面的互动交织在一起,但年轻人使用的数字媒体类型更多,个人网络也更多元化。不同年龄段的人都保存媒体,倾向于使用他们在早期学习使用的数字媒体。大约三分之一的参与者是网络个人:在每个年龄组中,他们最积极地使用数字媒体来保持联系和发展新的联系。另外三分之一是Socially Bounded,他们经常积极使用数字媒体,但将他们的联系保持在较小的社交群体中。剩下的三分之一是Socially Limited,他们最不可能使用数字媒体。年轻人最有可能成为网络个人,这让我们怀疑,受限制或受限制的人口比例是否会随着时间的推移而下降。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The networked question in the digital era: How do networked, bounded, and limited individuals connect at different stages in the life course?
Abstract We used in-depth interviews with 101 participants in the East York section of Toronto, Canada to understand how digital media affects social connectivity in general—and networked individualism in particular—for people at different stages of the life course. Although people of all ages intertwined their use of digital media with their face-to-face interactions, younger adults used more types of digital media and have more diversified personal networks. People in different age-groups conserved media, tending to stick with the digital media they learned to use in earlier life stages. Approximately one-third of the participants were Networked Individuals: In each age-group, they were the most actively using digital media to maintain ties and to develop new ones. Another one-third were Socially Bounded, who often actively used digital media but kept their connectivity within a smaller set of social groups. The remaining one-third, who were Socially Limited, were the least likely to use digital media. Younger adults were the most likely to be Networked Individuals, leading us to wonder if the percentage of the population who are Bounded or Limited will decline over time.
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来源期刊
Network Science
Network Science SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
5.90%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Network Science is an important journal for an important discipline - one using the network paradigm, focusing on actors and relational linkages, to inform research, methodology, and applications from many fields across the natural, social, engineering and informational sciences. Given growing understanding of the interconnectedness and globalization of the world, network methods are an increasingly recognized way to research aspects of modern society along with the individuals, organizations, and other actors within it. The discipline is ready for a comprehensive journal, open to papers from all relevant areas. Network Science is a defining work, shaping this discipline. The journal welcomes contributions from researchers in all areas working on network theory, methods, and data.
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