CMU-HCII-11-107 Human-Computer Interaction Institute School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
Reading, Writing, Relationships: The Impact Moira Burke December 2011 Ph.D. Thesis
The research is conducted at multiple levels looking at how different types of SNS use‐direct interaction with others and more "passive consumption" of social news–influence the number and quality of individuals' social ties and their aggregate social capital and well-being, including perceived social support, happiness, and physical health. The studies combine objective measures of SNS use (communication activity from the server logs of a popular social networking site) with self-reports of tie strength and well-being to accurately differentiate types of use with different partners. Longitudinal methods reveal how well-being changes over time with SNS use and are moderated by personal characteristics such as social communication skill and recent job loss. 189 pages
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