Decline in news content engagement or news medium engagement? A longitudinal analysis of news engagement since the rise of social and mobile media 2009–2012

Based on a 4-year longitudinal analysis of social media and mobile phone users in a Midwest US market, this study differentiates news content engagement from news medium engagement, proposes four levels of news engagement, and compares how social media and mobile media differ in their effects on eng...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journalism (London, England) England), 2018-05, Vol.19 (5), p.718-739
Hauptverfasser: Ha, Louisa, Xu, Ying, Yang, Chen, Wang, Fang, Yang, Liu, Abuljadail, Mohammad, Hu, Xiao, Jiang, Weiwei, Gabay, Itay
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container_end_page 739
container_issue 5
container_start_page 718
container_title Journalism (London, England)
container_volume 19
creator Ha, Louisa
Xu, Ying
Yang, Chen
Wang, Fang
Yang, Liu
Abuljadail, Mohammad
Hu, Xiao
Jiang, Weiwei
Gabay, Itay
description Based on a 4-year longitudinal analysis of social media and mobile phone users in a Midwest US market, this study differentiates news content engagement from news medium engagement, proposes four levels of news engagement, and compares how social media and mobile media differ in their effects on engagement in news content and news medium between the general population and college students. The analysis shows a steady decline in the interest in political news but not in other types of news. Total news consumption time gradually declined among the general population, and the gap between general population and students diminished over time. Social media use positively predicts total news consumption time. Predictors of news engagement differ for different levels of news engagement.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/1464884916667654
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title Decline in news content engagement or news medium engagement? A longitudinal analysis of news engagement since the rise of social and mobile media 2009–2012
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