East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values

This study examines media used for information in the East Asian countries of China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, using data from the World Values Survey. The sharing of Confucianculturemayleadtoauniformmediastructureacrossthesenations. Anotherpossibility is technological determinism,...

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Main Author: James Danowski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: World Association for Triple Helix and Future Strategy Studies 2020-07-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://koreascience.or.kr/article/JAKO202021752885664.pdf
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spelling doaj-522bb28375da4809a16042cd18c0c7c62020-11-25T02:26:15ZengWorld Association for Triple Helix and Future Strategy StudiesJournal of Contemporary Eastern Asia 2383-94492020-07-01191435810.17477/jcea.2020.19.1.043East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural ValuesJames Danowski0University of Illinois at ChicagoThis study examines media used for information in the East Asian countries of China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, using data from the World Values Survey. The sharing of Confucianculturemayleadtoauniformmediastructureacrossthesenations. Anotherpossibility is technological determinism, which would also lead to similarity across nations. However, it is possible that countries are at different stages of technology development and will eventually become more similar. An opposing notion is that differences in other values among nations predict digital media use. To examine the evidence considering these possibilities, we factor analyze each population's use of nine traditional and digital media to see how similar the structures are. What results is a three-dimensional solution for four out of five countries, except Singapore, which has a more simple two-dimensional structure. Analysts regard Singapore as the most digitally connected society, which raises the question as to whether it is higher on a technological development trajectory, to which other countries may transition. Perhaps a more simple media use structure is an adaptation to increasing information load. As well, as mobile devices have become a primary means of accessing the range of traditional and social media, it may have an expanded role in reducing media channel entropy. In terms of frequency of media use, Singapore is highest, while China is the lowest. Singapore stands out in high mobile use, and China for low Internet use. There appear to be developmental differences across the nations. Regressions on Internet use for 18 values indices find different values predictors in the East Asian countries, ruling out Confucianism as producing similar media patterns.http://koreascience.or.kr/article/JAKO202021752885664.pdfeastern asiacultural valuescommunication technologies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Danowski
spellingShingle James Danowski
East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values
Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia
eastern asia
cultural values
communication technologies
author_facet James Danowski
author_sort James Danowski
title East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values
title_short East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values
title_full East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values
title_fullStr East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values
title_full_unstemmed East Asian Communication Technology Use and Cultural Values
title_sort east asian communication technology use and cultural values
publisher World Association for Triple Helix and Future Strategy Studies
series Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia
issn 2383-9449
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This study examines media used for information in the East Asian countries of China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, using data from the World Values Survey. The sharing of Confucianculturemayleadtoauniformmediastructureacrossthesenations. Anotherpossibility is technological determinism, which would also lead to similarity across nations. However, it is possible that countries are at different stages of technology development and will eventually become more similar. An opposing notion is that differences in other values among nations predict digital media use. To examine the evidence considering these possibilities, we factor analyze each population's use of nine traditional and digital media to see how similar the structures are. What results is a three-dimensional solution for four out of five countries, except Singapore, which has a more simple two-dimensional structure. Analysts regard Singapore as the most digitally connected society, which raises the question as to whether it is higher on a technological development trajectory, to which other countries may transition. Perhaps a more simple media use structure is an adaptation to increasing information load. As well, as mobile devices have become a primary means of accessing the range of traditional and social media, it may have an expanded role in reducing media channel entropy. In terms of frequency of media use, Singapore is highest, while China is the lowest. Singapore stands out in high mobile use, and China for low Internet use. There appear to be developmental differences across the nations. Regressions on Internet use for 18 values indices find different values predictors in the East Asian countries, ruling out Confucianism as producing similar media patterns.
topic eastern asia
cultural values
communication technologies
url http://koreascience.or.kr/article/JAKO202021752885664.pdf
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