The digital divide shifts to differences in usage
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Abstract
In a representative survey of the Dutch population we found that people with low levels of education and disabled people are using the Internet for more hours a day in their spare time than higher educated and employed populations. To explain this finding, we investigated what these people are doing online. The first contribution is a theoretically validated cluster of Internet usage types: information, news, personal development, social interaction, leisure, commercial transaction and gaming. The second contribution is that, based on this classification, we were able to identify a number of usage differences, including those demonstrated by people with different gender, age, education and Internet experience,…
Citation impact
1,544
total citations
- FWCI
- 100.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- The Internet
- Digital divide
- Database transaction
- Spare time
- Internet privacy
- Sociology
- Inequality
- Psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Quality Education
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