Predictors of Internet Use
Top Cited Papers
- 7 June 2000
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media
- Vol. 44 (2) , 175-196
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15506878jobem4402_2
Abstract
We examined audience uses o f the Internet from a uses-and-gratifications perspective. We expected contextual age, unwillingness to communicate, social presence, and Internet motives to predict outcomes of Internet exposure, affinity and satisfaction. The analyses identified five motives for using the Internet and multivariate links among the antecedents and motives. The results suggested distinctions between instrumental and ritualized Internet use, as well as Internet use serving as a functional alternative to face-to-face interaction.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Information Suppression and Status Persistence in Group Decision Making The Effects of Communication MediaHuman Communication Research, 1996
- Why Communication Researchers Should Study the Internet: A DialogueJournal of Communication, 1996
- Getting a ClueSmall Group Research, 1996
- Relational Aspects of Computer-Mediated Communication: Experimental Observations over TimeOrganization Science, 1995
- Physical Proximity Effects on Computer-Mediated Group Idea GenerationSmall Group Research, 1994
- Psychological Predictors of Television Viewing MotivationCommunication Research, 1991
- A Social Information Processing Model of Media Use in OrganizationsCommunication Research, 1987
- A comparison of gratification models of media satisfactionCommunication Monographs, 1985
- Age, context and television useJournal of Broadcasting, 1981
- The unwillingness‐to‐communicate scale: Development and validationCommunication Monographs, 1976