Study: Online Social Networking Keeps Friends Together

The Internet and e-mail help to expand and strengthen the social ties that people maintain in the offline world, according to a new report released today by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.

The report, “The Strength of Internet Ties,” highlights how e-mail supplements, rather than replaces, the communication people have with others in their network.

For example, the study concludes that one major payoff comes when people use the Internet to press their social networks into action as they face major challenges. People not only socialize online, but they also incorporate the Internet into their quest for information and advice as they seek help andmake decisions.

Disputing concerns that heavy use of the Internet might diminish people’s social relations, the report finds that the Internet fits seamlessly with Americans’ in-person and phone encounters. With the help of the Internet, people are able to maintain active contact with sizable social networks, even though many of the people in those networks do not live close to them.

“The larger, the more far-flung, and the more diverse a person’s network, the more important e-mail is,” argued Jeffrey Boase, a University of Toronto sociologist who co-authored the Pew Internet Project report. “You can’t make phone calls or personal visits to all your friends very often, but you can’cc’ them regularly with a couple of keystrokes. That turns out to be very important.”

Big Buddy Lists

Another benefit apparently comes when people want to mobilize their networks as they face problems or significant decisions. The Pew Internet Project survey finds that Internet users are more likely than non-users to have been helped by those in their networks as they faced important events in theirlife.

“Internet use provides online Americans a path to resources, such as access to people who may have the right information to help deal with family health crises or find a new job,” said John Horrigan, Associate Director for Research at the Pew Internet Project and another author of the report. “Whenyou need help these days, you don’t need a bugle to call the cavalry, you need a big buddy list.”

Networked Individualism

These survey findings fit into a larger transformation in social relations that sociologist Barry Wellman of the University of Toronto has called the rise of “networked individualism.” He noted that users of modern technology are less tied to local groups and increasingly tied to looser and moregeographically scattered networks.

“The Internet and the cell phone have transformed communication: Instead of being based on house-to-house interactions, they are built on person-to-person exchanges,” maintained Wellman, also a co-author of the report. “This creates a new basis for community. Rather than relying on a single community for social support, individuals often must actively seek out a variety of appropriate people and resources for different situations.”

Net-Based Decisions

In addition to using the Internet to get help from their networks, some use the Internet to get information and compare options as they face decisions and milestones in their lives.

One of the Pew Internet Project surveys covered in this report shows that 45 percent of Internet users — about 60 million Americans — say the Internet has played an important or crucial role in helping them deal with at least one major life decision in the previous two years. That is a 33 percentincrease from a similar survey in early 2002.

About 21 million said the Internet had played a crucial or important role getting additional training for their career. Another 17 million cited the Internet helped them help another person with a major illness or medical condition: About 16 million said the Internet had played a crucial or important role in the car buying process.

A Growing Phenomenon

“People who spend so much time online start to think that everybody is online. Everybody isn’t, but more and more people want to be and will be. Social networking is one of the aspects of the Internet that is attracting them,” said B.L. Ochman, president of WhatsNextOnline.com.

The social networking phenomenon is only going to grow, she told TechNewsWorld. “People now have tools to say what they want to say, to find people who agree with them, and to debate with people who disagree with them. That’s remarkable.”

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