The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication

Internet social networking sites have been the source of much speculation and controversy in the few years that they have been in existence. These sites (the most popular being MySpace and Facebook) allow their users to create online profiles, with which they can post pictures of themselves and inte...

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Main Author: Nyland, Robert Scott
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1240
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2239&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-22392019-05-16T03:21:54Z The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication Nyland, Robert Scott Internet social networking sites have been the source of much speculation and controversy in the few years that they have been in existence. These sites (the most popular being MySpace and Facebook) allow their users to create online profiles, with which they can post pictures of themselves and interact with other users via text-based messaging. These sites are especially popular among teens and young adults, many of whom find their lives controlled by these sites. Utilizing the Uses and Gratificatioons approach in combination with the theory of the niche, the aim of this study is to understand the gratifications that are derived from the use of social networking sites, and how those gratifications compare with those obtained from the use of other communications methods (face-to-face communication and e-mail). Additionally, the study explores whether or not there has been a displacement effect for these older media with the introduction of social networking. A sample of 340 undergraduate and graduate students from a large western university were surveyed in-class regarding their use of three communications media (internet social networking, e-mail, and face-to-face communication). Students responded to 25 gratifications statements for each medium, rating how often they had used it for that particular purpose. They also responded to a question regarding whether their use of e-mail and face-to-face conversation has changed since they started using social networking sites. Answers from the gratification statements were subjected to principal component factor analysis using varimax rotation. After throwing out 10 statements due to their incompatibility across the three media, three gratification factors emerged: Gratification Opportunities, Social Utility, and Entertainment. Then using niche formulas, the media was compared across these three factors. Overall, face-to-face communication had the broadest niche, signalling that is best capable of fulfilling media gratifications. It also had the broadest niche in the Social Utility and Entertainment Factor, while e-mail had the broadest niche in the Gratifications Opportunities dimension. The results suggest that social networking may be popular because it acts as a convenient place to hang out — combining its relatively broad niches in Gratifications Opportunities and Entertainment gratifications, but shows little support for a displacement effect caused by its adoption. 2007-11-26T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1240 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2239&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive internet social networking gratification niches MySpace Facebook theory of the niche uses and gratifications Communication
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic internet social networking
gratification niches
MySpace
Facebook
theory of the niche
uses and gratifications
Communication
spellingShingle internet social networking
gratification niches
MySpace
Facebook
theory of the niche
uses and gratifications
Communication
Nyland, Robert Scott
The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication
description Internet social networking sites have been the source of much speculation and controversy in the few years that they have been in existence. These sites (the most popular being MySpace and Facebook) allow their users to create online profiles, with which they can post pictures of themselves and interact with other users via text-based messaging. These sites are especially popular among teens and young adults, many of whom find their lives controlled by these sites. Utilizing the Uses and Gratificatioons approach in combination with the theory of the niche, the aim of this study is to understand the gratifications that are derived from the use of social networking sites, and how those gratifications compare with those obtained from the use of other communications methods (face-to-face communication and e-mail). Additionally, the study explores whether or not there has been a displacement effect for these older media with the introduction of social networking. A sample of 340 undergraduate and graduate students from a large western university were surveyed in-class regarding their use of three communications media (internet social networking, e-mail, and face-to-face communication). Students responded to 25 gratifications statements for each medium, rating how often they had used it for that particular purpose. They also responded to a question regarding whether their use of e-mail and face-to-face conversation has changed since they started using social networking sites. Answers from the gratification statements were subjected to principal component factor analysis using varimax rotation. After throwing out 10 statements due to their incompatibility across the three media, three gratification factors emerged: Gratification Opportunities, Social Utility, and Entertainment. Then using niche formulas, the media was compared across these three factors. Overall, face-to-face communication had the broadest niche, signalling that is best capable of fulfilling media gratifications. It also had the broadest niche in the Social Utility and Entertainment Factor, while e-mail had the broadest niche in the Gratifications Opportunities dimension. The results suggest that social networking may be popular because it acts as a convenient place to hang out — combining its relatively broad niches in Gratifications Opportunities and Entertainment gratifications, but shows little support for a displacement effect caused by its adoption.
author Nyland, Robert Scott
author_facet Nyland, Robert Scott
author_sort Nyland, Robert Scott
title The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication
title_short The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication
title_full The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication
title_fullStr The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication
title_full_unstemmed The Gratification Niches of Internet Social Networking, E-mail, and Face-to-face Communication
title_sort gratification niches of internet social networking, e-mail, and face-to-face communication
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2007
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1240
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2239&context=etd
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