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%T Patterns of multi-channel communication among older teens
%A Geser, Hans
%P 26
%D 2007
%= 2012-05-24T09:24:00Z
%~ USB Köln
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-341011
%X "Based on a study of 1440 Swiss teenagers in 2003, higly complementary (instead of substitutive) relationships are found between the usage of various technical communication media as well as between media usage and face-to-face interactions. Males seem particularly prone to use all media channels in a complementary fashion. Among both genders, there is a particularly strong complementarity between the fixed and the mobile phone. When partners meet rarely, the communicate more by written than by oral media, particularly by SMS. By comparing older acquaintances with more recently created interpersonal relationships, it is found that the mix of media channels doesn't change significantly over time, except that the exchange of Short Text Messages declines. While to closeness of a relationship seems to be positively affected by the frequency of meetings and fixed phone calls, mobile contacts and Emails don't seem to make any consistent contribution." (author's abstract). Contents 1.Introduction; 2. Exploring the factors of individual and collective media choice; 3. Research Questions and Research Design; 4. Total amount of communicative relations; 5. Relationships between the Five Channels: Intercorrelations and Factor Structures; 6. On the Relationship between Mobile Calls and Fixed Phone Calls; 7. Relationships between Physical Meetings and Technically Mediated Communications; 8. Older and more recent acquaintances; 9. Impacts on the closeness of relationship; 10. Conclusions; References.
%C CHE
%C Zürich
%G en
%9 Arbeitspapier
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info