articleJournal of Computer-Mediated CommunicationOct 1, 2007BRONZE OA

Whose Space? Differences Among Users and Non-Users of Social Network Sites

Midwestern University · Northwestern University

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

Are there systematic differences between people who use social network sites and those who stay away, despite a familiarity with them? Based on data from a survey administered to a diverse group of young adults, this article looks at the predictors of SNS usage, with particular focus on Facebook, MySpace, Xanga, and Friendster. Findings suggest that use of such sites is not randomly distributed across a group of highly wired users. A person’s gender, race and ethnicity, and parental educational background are all associated with use, but in most cases only when the aggregate concept of social network sites is disaggregated by service. Additionally, people with more experience and autonomy of use are more…

Citation impact

1,293
total citations
FWCI
187.13
Percentile
100%
References
44
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ethnic group
  • Space (punctuation)
  • Autonomy
  • Social network (sociolinguistics)
  • Race (biology)
  • Inequality
  • Service (business)
  • Digital divide
No related works found for this paper.

Funding