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990000574830204151 |
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020219s2002 mau b 001 0 eng |
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|a 2002022765
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|a GBA2-68929
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|a 0262112698 (hc : alk. paper)
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|a 9780262112697 (hc : alk. paper)
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|a (OCoLC)000057483
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|a (udesa)000057483USA01
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|a (OCoLC)49260842
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|a (OCoLC)990000574830204151
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|a DLC
|b eng
|c DLC
|d C#P
|d UKM
|d BAKER
|d MUQ
|d NLGGC
|d YDXCP
|d BTCTA
|d IG#
|d UBY
|d HEBIS
|d HUH
|d OCLCQ
|d U@S
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|a pcc
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|a n-us---
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|a U@SA
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|a HM851
|b .K379 2002
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|a 303.48/33/0973
|2 21
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|a Katz, James Everett.
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|a Social consequences of Internet use :
|b access, involvement, and interaction /
|c James E. Katz and Ronald E. Rice.
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|a Cambridge, Mass. :
|b MIT Press,
|c c2002.
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|a xxiv, 460 p. ;
|c 24 cm.
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|a Includes bibliographical references (p. [411]-438) and index.
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|a First National Random Study of the Internet's Social -- Consequences -- What Hath the Mouse Wrought? -- The Syntopia Project -- Acknowledgments -- 1 America and the Internet: Access, Involvement, and Social -- Interaction -- Making Sense of the Internet -- Three Central Social Issues of the Internet: Access, Civic and Community Involvement, and Social Interaction and Expression -- Major Dystopian Liabilities Claimed -- Major Utopian Possibilities Proclaimed -- Syntopian Realities -- I Access -- 2 Access: Basic Issues and Prior Evidence -- Conceptualization and Consequences of Access -- The Dystopian Perspective -- The Utopian Perspective -- Conclusion -- 3 Access and Digital Divide: Results -- Factors Influencing Awareness and Usage -- Nonusers and Users across the Survey Years -- A Persistent but Declining Digital Divide -- Differences in Usage by Cohort and Survey Year across Demographics -- Awareness --
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|a Combined Influences on Usage and Awareness -- Motivations for Internet Usage: Nonusers and Users, Recent and Long-Term Users, 1995 and 2000 -- Results from the Pew Internet and American Life Project Survey, March 2000 -- Conclusion -- 4 Logging Off: Internet Dropouts -- Results -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- 5 Access and Digital Divide Examples -- Perspective on the Digital Divide -- Access: An Important Human Right -- Access Programs to Overcome Group or Individual Isolation -- Access for Self-Identity and Advancing Personal Interests -- Reducing Barriers to Accessing Culture -- Interest in Access Limited by a Lack of Perceived Usefulness -- Recurring Problems with Attempts to Overcome the Digital -- Divide -- Barriers Are Cultural and Social, Not Technological -- Conclusion -- II Civic and Community Involvement --
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|a 6 Civic and Community Involvement: Basic Issues and Prior -- Evidence -- Civic and Political Involvement -- Community Involvement -- A Broader Question of Impacts -- Conclusion -- 7 Political Involvement: Survey Results -- Offline and Online Political Activity -- Related Results from the Pew 2000 Surveys -- Conclusion -- 8 Community Involvement: Survey Results -- Involvement in Religious, Leisure, and Community -- Organizations -- Conclusion -- 9 Involvement Examples: Evidence for an "Invisible Mouse"? -- Social-Support Networks -- Family -- Personal Social Networks: Maintaining, Restoring, and Affirming -- Involvement with Life and Death: Keeping Memory Alive -- Sex as a Motive for Involvement with the Internet -- Community Building: Political Involvement -- Community Building: Ethnic, Cultural, and Historical Affiliation and Enrichment -- Community Building: Social and Recreational -- Altruistic Endeavors Encourage Involvement Feelings -- Negative Consequences of Certain Forms of Involvement -- Conclusion --
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|a III Social Interaction and Expression -- 10 Social Interaction and Expression: Basic Issues and Prior -- Evidence -- The Dystopian Perspective -- The Utopian Perspective -- Potential Transformations -- Conclusion -- 11 Social Interaction: Survey Results -- Offline Interaction by Users and Nonusers -- Additional Offline Analyses for 1995 -- Additional Offline Analyses for 2000 -- Online Interaction -- Additional Online Analyses for 1995 -- Additional Online Analyses for 2000 -- Results from the Pew March 2000 Survey -- Conclusion -- 12 Interaction and Expression: Self, Identity, and Homepages -- What Self? -- Counterexamples to the Postmodern Argument -- The Personal Homepage as Presentation of an Integrated Self -- Conclusion --
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|a 13 Interaction and Expression Examples -- Interaction to Form Social Ties and Relationships -- Self-Expression: An Underestimated Aspect of the Internet -- Self-Expression Leading to Interaction with Others -- Political Expression -- Self-Expression, Self-Identity, and Human Memory -- Conclusion -- IV Integration and Conclusion -- 14 Access, Involvement, Interaction, and Social Capital on the Internet: Digital Divides and Digital Bridges -- Summary of Basic Issues and Survey Results -- The Internet: Access, Involvement, Interaction, and Social -- Capital -- Conclusion -- Appendixes -- A Methodology -- National Telephone Surveys -- Statistical Analyses -- User Interviews and Site Samples -- B Descriptive Statistics from Surveys.
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650 |
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|a Internet
|x Social aspects
|z United States.
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650 |
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|a Digital divide
|z United States.
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650 |
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|a Telecommunication
|x Social aspects
|z United States.
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700 |
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|a Rice, Ronald E.
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856 |
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|3 Table of contents
|u http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy035/2002022765.html
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