5 research outputs found

    Social Networking Sites and Our Lives

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    Examines the characteristics of social networking site users, their online activities, and their friendships, sense of trust, social support, perspectives, and civic engagement by site and compared with those of non-users and users of other technologies

    Why Most Facebook Users Get More Than They Give

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    Analyzes data on Facebook user activity, including patterns in sending friend requests, adding content, and "liking" their friends' content; the interconnectedness of friends; and links between the number of friends, Facebook activity, and social support

    Friends in all the right places: Social resources and geography in the age of social network sites

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    Social network sites (SNSs) such as Facebook connect users to social ties living both near and far. As a result, use of these sites may mitigate the threat geographic distance poses to relationships, and to the social support that these relationships provide. This dissertation asks, in the age of social network sites, are dispersed social networks equally as supportive as local ones? Findings suggest a persistent effect of geographic distance on the maintenance of social ties and on social resource levels - aid that ties can provide. While SNS use is linked to greater levels of nonmaterial resources, those that may be exchanged by people living far away from one another (e.g. advice), use is not linked to material resources that must be exchanged in-person (e.g. emergency aid). A theory of SNSs\u27 social resource globalizing benefits supported by analyses of survey, interview, and SNS server log data is presented. SNSs help users to maintain geographically diverse and dispersed social resources, functioning as resource banks from which users may withdraw social support. These sites connect users to resources that support geographic movement and a greater awareness of non-local issues and perspectives (i.e., promote global fluency ). Though users believe their friend networks to be more local and less geographically diverse than they actually are, certain SNS activities help users to realize the resource potential in their friend network by increasing the visibility and accessibility of the resources that SNS friends can provide

    Friends in all the right places: Social resources and geography in the age of social network sites

    No full text
    Social network sites (SNSs) such as Facebook connect users to social ties living both near and far. As a result, use of these sites may mitigate the threat geographic distance poses to relationships, and to the social support that these relationships provide. This dissertation asks, in the age of social network sites, are dispersed social networks equally as supportive as local ones? Findings suggest a persistent effect of geographic distance on the maintenance of social ties and on social resource levels - aid that ties can provide. While SNS use is linked to greater levels of nonmaterial resources, those that may be exchanged by people living far away from one another (e.g. advice), use is not linked to material resources that must be exchanged in-person (e.g. emergency aid). A theory of SNSs\u27 social resource globalizing benefits supported by analyses of survey, interview, and SNS server log data is presented. SNSs help users to maintain geographically diverse and dispersed social resources, functioning as resource banks from which users may withdraw social support. These sites connect users to resources that support geographic movement and a greater awareness of non-local issues and perspectives (i.e., promote global fluency ). Though users believe their friend networks to be more local and less geographically diverse than they actually are, certain SNS activities help users to realize the resource potential in their friend network by increasing the visibility and accessibility of the resources that SNS friends can provide
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