Search results for "Media Use"

showing 10 items of 40 documents

The Impact of Internet and Social Media Use on Well-Being

2021

The present research examines the longitudinal average impact of frequency of use of Internet and social networking sites (SNS) on subjective well-being of adolescents in Germany. Based on five-wave panel data that cover a period of nine years, we disentangle between-person and within-person effects of media use on depressive symptomatology and life satisfaction as indicators of subjective well-being. Additionally, we control for confounders such as TV use, self-esteem, and satisfaction with friends. We found that frequency of Internet use in general and use of SNS in particular is not substantially related subjective well-being. The explanatory power of general Internet use or SNS use to p…

Media UseComputer Networks and Communications050801 communication & media studiesSocial Networking Sites (SNS)Affect (psychology)Adolescents050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychology0508 media and communications0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSocial mediaInternetbusiness.industry05 social sciencesConfoundingSubjective Well-beingLife satisfactionSDG 10 - Reduced InequalitiesLife SatisfactionLongitudinal AnalysisComputer Science ApplicationsWell-beingDepressive Symptomatology/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/reduced_inequalitiesThe InternetTelevisionExplanatory powerPsychologybusinessPanel dataJournal of Computer-Mediated Communication
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Young people’s interaction with media in Egypt, India, Finland, Argentina and Kenya

2012

En la actual sociedad de la información, encontrar, valorar y utilizar la comunicación es una estrategia fundamental de supervivencia. Los medios tradicionales y nuevos como las bibliotecas, archivos, medios de masas o Internet tienen una función crucial para las sociedades como fuentes de información. Este trabajo presenta los resultados de un estudio llevado a cabo en Egipto, India, Finlandia, Argentina y Kenia. Basado en una investigación empírica, ofrece una visión general de cómo los jóvenes de hoy en día utilizan diversas fuentes para la búsqueda de información y cuáles son sus implicaciones para los programas de alfabetización mediática. En concreto se explora cómo los jóvenes utiliz…

Cultural StudiesMedia useInternetProveedores de informaciónCommunicationParticipationDiariesJóvenesInformation providersEducationNew mediaParticipaciónUso de medios de comunicaciónEducación en mediosYoung peopleDiariosNuevos medios de comunicaciónMedia education
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Guilt and Media Use

2020

Self-conscious emotionsmedia_common.quotation_subjectMedia useWell-beingSelf-controlPsychologySocial psychologyMoral disengagementmedia_commonThe International Encyclopedia of Media Psychology
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Gendered power relations in the digital age : an analysis of Japanese women’s media choice and use within a global context

2021

This study investigates the persistence of gendered choice and use of media, particularly in Japanese domestic settings. It shows how women’s significant presence in the digital media environment does not necessarily translate into substantial changes in gendered power dynamics in choosing and using particular media for certain purposes at home. This project’s authors, researchers from Argentina, Finland, Israel, Japan, and the US, analyzed interview data from Japan by drawing on the Foucauldian concept of micro-level power, which is categorized into three main types: personal authority, media affordances, and space-time constellations. Through this process, we interviewed 77 individuals, r…

Persistence (psychology)naisetVisual Arts and Performing Artsmediankäyttödomestic settings [media use]micro-level powerContext (language use)käyttömedia choiceDigital mediasukupuoliGender StudiesMedia useCross-national researchSociologystereotypiatjapanilaisetbusiness.industryCommunicationmediaPower relationsGender studiespatriarkaalisuusjoukkoviestimetcross-national researchsukupuoliroolitMedia choicemiehetbusinessvalta
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Is It Really That Funny? Laughter, Emotional Contagion, and Heuristic Processing During Shared Media Use

2017

ABSTRACTWhen people use humorous media content, their behavior and assessments of the content may depend on the emotional expressions (e.g., laughter) of those around them. In a laboratory experiment in which 80 participants watched a movie clip with a confederate who either laughed or remained silent, we identified two parallel processes. The confederate’s laughter induced behavioral responses in our participants (laughing or smiling). Through those responses, a corresponding appraisal of the media content was generated: The content was rated funnier in comparison to situations in which the confederate did not laugh. This effect corresponds to emotional contagion processes and was especial…

Social PsychologyCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050109 social psychologyEmotional contagionConscientiousness050105 experimental psychologyLaughterMedia use0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEmotional expressionLaboratory experimentPsychologyContent (Freudian dream analysis)Media contentSocial psychologyApplied Psychologymedia_commonMedia Psychology
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Sociodemographic Correlates of Parental Co-Participation in Digital Media Use and Physical Play of Preschool-Age Children

2021

Young children’s digital media use and physical activity have gained attention in recent research. Parental co-participation has a major impact on children’s health consequences. This study addressed a gap in the research by investigating daily parental co-participation in children’s digital media use and physical play, using the family ecological model theoretical framework. The participants in this nationally representative cross-sectional study were 2512 Finnish parents with two- to six-year-old children. Parents completed a questionnaire. Sociodemographic correlates of co-participation and of the awareness of guidelines regarding co-participation and correlation between co-participation…

MalemediankäyttöChild Behaviorphysical activitysuosituksetlapset (ikäryhmät)ArticleSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansguidelinesChildExercisesociodemographicslapset (perheenjäsenet)young childrenparental co-participationInternetsosiodemografiset tekijätRdigital media useCross-Sectional Studiesvanhemmatleikki-ikäisetChild PreschoolMedicineFemaleuusmediafyysinen aktiivisuus
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“Facebocrastination”? Predictors of using Facebook for procrastination and its effects on students’ well-being

2016

Procrastinating with popular online media such as Facebook has been suggested to impair users well-being, particularly among students. Building on recent procrastination, self-control, and communication literature, we conducted two studies (total N=699) that examined the predictors of procrastination with Facebook as well as its effects on students academic and overall well-being. Results from both studies consistently indicate that low trait self-control, habitual Facebook checking, and high enjoyment of Facebook use predict almost 40 percent of the variance of using Facebook for procrastination. Moreover, results from Study 2 underline that using Facebook for the irrational delay of impor…

Software_OPERATINGSYSTEMSbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesProcrastination050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologyDysfunctional familySelf-controlDigital mediaHuman-Computer Interaction0508 media and communicationsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Media useWell-beingTrait0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSocial mediaInformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUSbusinessPsychologySocial psychologyGeneral Psychologymedia_commonComputers in Human Behavior
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Life Satisfaction and Instagram Addiction among University Students during the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Bidirectional Mediating Role of Loneliness.

2022

Background: Social isolation during the lockdown, and the greater use of online platforms to connect with other people, can alter the dynamic relationship between loneliness, social media use, and subjective well-being. The study examines the mediating role of loneliness in the bidirectional association between Instagram addiction and life satisfaction. Methods: A sample of 954 university students from Poland were enrolled in a cross-sectional online study during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants aged between 19 and 42 (M = 22.56, SD = 2.36), and most of them were women (86.48%). Standardized questionnaires were used to measure Instagram addiction (BIAS), loneliness (DJ…

AdultMaleUniversitiesHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisLonelinessPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCOVID-19Personal SatisfactionYoung AdultCross-Sectional StudiesCommunicable Disease ControlInstagram addiction; loneliness; mediation analysis; satisfaction with life; social media use; social media addiction; university students; COVID-19 pandemicHumansFemaleStudentsPandemicsInternational journal of environmental research and public health
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Navigating high-choice European political information environments : a comparative analysis of news user profiles and political knowledge

2021

The transition from low- to high-choice media environments has had far-reaching implications for citizens’ media use and its relationship with political knowledge. However, there is still a lack of comparative research on how citizens combine the usage of different media and how that is related to political knowledge. To fill this void, we use a unique cross-national survey about the online and offline media use habits of more than 28,000 individuals in 17 European countries. Our aim is to (i) profile different types of news consumers and (ii) understand how each user profile is linked to political knowledge acquisition. Our results show that five user profiles – news minimalists, social m…

Online and offlinecrossSociology and Political Sciencenews repertoires050801 communication & media studiescross-nationalnews media usePoliticsSeekers0508 media and communications10240 Department of Communication and Media Research3312 Sociology and Political ScienceComparative researchMedia usePolitical science050602 political science & public administrationcomparative researchSocial media070 News media journalism & publishingpolitical knowledgeUser profileCommunication05 social sciencesPoliticsnationalAdvertisingKnowledge acquisition[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political science0506 political scienceddc:Mass communications3315 CommunicationThe international journal of press/politics
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Factors mediating social media-induced fear of missing out (FoMO) and social media fatigue: A comparative study among Instagram and Snapchat users

2022

The proliferation of social media platforms has provided researchers with ample opportunities to explore the implications of these platforms' positive and negative use. Focusing on the latter, the literature has highlighted the severe implications of the fear of missing out (FoMO) and its associations with negative aspects of social media use, such as the problematic use of social media, phubbing, and reduced well-being. Our study investigates the association between FoMO and social media fatigue, which is mediated by information and communication overload, online subjective well-being (OSWB), and compulsive social media use (compulsive use). The proposed model is grounded strongly in self-…

Technology overloadCompulsive social media useManagement of Technology and Innovation:Samfunnsvitenskap: 200 [VDP]VDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Psykologi: 260FoMO; Social media fatigue; Technology overload; Well-being; Compulsive social media useWell-beingFoMOSocial media fatigueBusiness and International ManagementApplied Psychology
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