Discovering social behaviour variances of younger and older users through social interaction analysis
Author(s) -
Darren Quinn,
Liming Chen,
Maurice Mulvenna
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
international journal of web science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-8809
pISSN - 1757-8795
DOI - 10.1504/ijws.2013.056574
Subject(s) - psychology , social relation , social psychology , developmental psychology
The popularity of social networking has risen considerably in recent years, increasing opportunities for social interaction. As an approach, it has the potential to reduce the burden of social isolation for older users. However, the current state of older user engagement requires investigation. In a study, exploring the possibilities of interaction analysis to undercover user behaviours/characteristics, five aspects of younger and older online engagement were investigated comprising; connectivity, length of engagement, application usage, engagement frequency classification and profile maintenance frequency. Results derived from user generated content, enabled direct comparisons on the engagement levels of both cohorts. Results established interaction analysis as an approach to detect user behaviour(s), observing the degree older users failure to return and maintain activity as significant; however, users who do engage, maintain activity with a broad range of functions. Results quantified the interactions and behaviours of two disparate cohorts, determining their key user characteristics
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