Social capital on facebook
Carnegie Mellon University · Meta (United States)
Abstract
Though social network site use is often treated as a monolithic activity, in which all time is equally social and its impact the same for all users, we examine how Facebook affects social capital depending upon: (1) types of site activities, contrasting one-on-one communication, broadcasts to wider audiences, and passive consumption of social news, and (2) individual differences among users, including social communication skill and self-esteem. Longitudinal surveys matched to server logs from 415 Facebook users reveal that receiving messages from friends is associated with increases in bridging social capital, but that other uses are not. However, using the site to passively consume news assists those with…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 75.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Social connectedness
- Social capital
- Social network (sociolinguistics)
- Social media
- Bridging (networking)
- Value (mathematics)
- Social media optimization
- Social relation
- Quality Education