Abstract

This paper explores the impact of communication media and the Internet on connectivity between people. Results from a series of social network studies of media use are used as background for exploration of these impacts. These studies explored the use of all available media among members of an academic research group and among distance learners. Asking about media use as well as about the strength of the tie between communicating pairs revealed that those more strongly tied used more media to communicate than weak ties, and that media use within groups conformed to a unidimensional scale, showing a configuration of different tiers of media use supporting social networks of different ties strengths. These results lead to a number of implications regarding media and Internet connectivity, including: how media use can be added to characteristics of social network ties; how introducing a medium can create latent tie connectivity among group members that provides the technical means for activating weak ties, and also how a change in a medium can disrupt existing weak tie networks; how the tiers of media use also suggest that certain media support different kinds of information flow; and the importance of organization-level decisions about what media to provide and promote. The paper concludes with a discussion of implications for Internet effects.

Keywords

The InternetSocial mediaInterpersonal tiesStrong tiesInformation flowScale (ratio)Internet privacyNew mediaComputer sciencePsychologyBusinessAdvertisingPublic relationsSocial psychologyPolitical scienceWorld Wide WebGeography

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
8
Issue
2
Pages
125-147
Citations
1284
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Caroline Haythornthwaite (2005). Social networks and Internet connectivity effects. Information Communication & Society , 8 (2) , 125-147. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691180500146185

Identifiers

DOI
10.1080/13691180500146185