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Journal ArticleDOI

Digital Divides From Access to Activities: Comparing Mobile and Personal Computer Internet Users

TLDR
While sociodemographic differences are more influential, device type can increase likelihood of use for some “capital enhancing” activities, but only for a computer, thus, although mobile Internet is available for those on the wrong side of the digital divide, these users do not engage in many activities, decreasing potential benefits.
Abstract
Digital inequality can take many forms. Four forms studied here are access to Internet, use of different devices, extent of usage, and engagement in different Internet activities. However, it is not clear whether sociodemographic factors, or devices, are more influential in usage and activities. Results from an unfamiliar context show that there are significant sociodemographic influences on access, device, usage, and activities, and differences in activities by device type and usage. While sociodemographic differences are more influential, device type can increase likelihood of use for some “capital enhancing” activities, but only for a computer. Thus, although mobile Internet is available for those on the wrong side of the digital divide, these users do not engage in many activities, decreasing potential benefits.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The digital divide has grown old: Determinants of a digital divide among seniors

TL;DR: It is found that Internet use is strongly skewed in this age group leading to a partial exclusion of the old seniors (70+), and Logistic regression shows that gender differences in usage disappear if controlled for education, income, technical interest, pre-retirement computer use and marital status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of Internet skills, uses and outcomes. A systematic review of the second- and third-level digital divide

TL;DR: The results show that the third-level digital divide was underexposed, and the identified determinants show that digital divide research is largely limited to sociodemographic and socioeconomic determinants.
Journal ArticleDOI

The first-level digital divide shifts from inequalities in physical access to inequalities in material access.

TL;DR: The study finds that a diversity in access to devices and peripherals, device-related opportunities, and the ongoing expenses required to maintain the hardware, software, and subscriptions affect existing inequalities related to Internet skills, uses, and outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Multifaceted Model of Internet Access for Understanding Digital Divides: An Empirical Investigation

TL;DR: The analysis indicates that while the digital divide policies' focus has moved to skills and usage access, motivational and material access remain relevant since they are necessary through the entire process of Internet appropriation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling the second-level digital divide: A five-country study of social differences in Internet use:

TL;DR: Results show that sociodemographics alone account for up to half of the variance in usage in these high-penetration countries, with age being the strongest predictor.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phoning it in: Theory in mobile media and communication in developing countries

TL;DR: As 75 percent of the world's mobile subscriptions are in developing countries, studies of use patterns are essential to broader understanding and scholars should engage with existing theory and literature in order to operate within a framework and expand readership.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Consequences of Internet Use: Access, Involvement and Interaction

TL;DR: The Syntopia Project as mentioned in this paper explores the impact of the Internet on society from three perspectives: access to Internet technology (the digital divide), involvement with groups and communities through the Internet (social capital), and use of the internet for social interaction and expression (identity).
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconsidering the Rural–Urban Continuum in Rural Health Research: A Test of Stable Relationships Using Mortality as a Health Measure

TL;DR: It is suggested that a health status or outcomes categorization scheme is likely to be a more appropriate metric for rural health research, and coefficients shift signs across the continuum, indicating that collapsed models may be inappropriate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Where do you go online? A comparison of internet connectedness via personal computers and mobile phones in Japan

TL;DR: The result indicates that people engage in a wider variety of activities via their computers than via mobile phones, while the number of e-mails sent was similar between the two media.
Book

Mobile Communication: Dimensions of Social Policy

James E. Katz
TL;DR: In this paper, the social policy dimension of the mobile communication revolution is addressed by leading thinkers in the field, including the role of mobiles in policy formation and evaluation in several areas including the mobile-digital divide and political campaigns.
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