Posts Tagged: study


13
Dec 07

Download the MacArthur Series on Digital Media and Learning

Says danah:

I am very very very pleased to announce that the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning is now out in the world and ready for your affection. The purpose of the series is to “examine the effect of digital media tools on how people learn, network, communicate, and play, and how growing up with these tools may affect a person’s sense of self, how they express themselves, and their ability to learn, exercise judgment, and think systematically.”

This is great on many levels, but I’m most excited that all of the books are available for free download. Simply browse to the series’ page at the MIT Press website, and you can download the chapters. Kudos to the authors and the MacArthur Foundation for freeing this great content.


20
Nov 07

New SNS Publications

Quickly, two noteworthy new publications in the SNS space:

Finally, an interesting paper in JOIS, entitled “A comparison of academics’ attitudes towards the rights protection of their research and teaching materials.” This study found significant differences in desired rights protection between teachers and researchers. Unlike the two studies I linked above, you can’t read this one because it’s behind a paywall.


12
Nov 07

News and Notes

A few quick items that I’ve been meaning to link:

  • The ENISA Position Paper “Security Issues and Recommendations for Online Social Networks” has been released. Co-authors include Nicole Ellison, Scott Golder, Alessandro Acquisti and myself; while there are varied opinions about the state of security in SNS, I think we all found the discursive process interesting.
  • An archived edition of a Social Networks webinar I presented has just been posted. The webinar was organized through Higher Ed Experts, and actually comes as part of a 5-presentation series on online Social Networks. This webinar is targeted towards Highed Ed administrators; I discuss the role of social networks on campus.
  • OCLC has released a comprehensive report on online social networks and their use in libraries. While I was at OCLC I was able to sit down with the team who worked on this report and I was very impressed. This should be a valuable resource for information professionals.

On another note, congratulations to Andy Baio as he moves on to new projects. Andy’s blog is required reading, and I look forward to his new focus on writing and analysis.

Update: Right after I posted this, the JCMC special issue on SNS went live. Some great stuff here – congrats to co-editors danah boyd and Nicole Ellison.


7
Jan 07

Pew on Social Networks: 7 out of 10 teens have non-public profiles

This afternoon, the Pew Internet and American Life Project released data from their recent survey of teen Social Networks use. Needless to say, the data is very interesting, and offers data affirming some of the themes we’re seeing in recent SNS research. danah has blogged her reaction to the data, and I’m sure this report will echo substantially through our corner of the blogosphere.

In my opinion, the key datapoint presented in this study is employment of private (friends-only or otherwise restricted) profiles by teens in social network sites. In the study, it is reported that 77% of teens have a profile available online, but 59% of teens restrict these profiles to their friends. This means that only 3 out of 10 teens have a profile that is “open” to be viewed online[1], affirming a recent report out of UW-Eau Claire that teens are effectively employing privacy strategies online.

Beyond this interesting privacy statistic, a number of other trends emerge. In my social network predictions last week, I was called out a few times for saying that most people can oly effectively maintain one or two profiles. The data from Pew clearly validates this (and no, I hadn’t seen Pew’s data when I wrote my predictions). The Pew report states:

Fully 85% of teens who have created an online profile say the profile they use or update most often is on MySpace, while 7% update a profile on Facebook. Another 1% tend to a primary profile on Xanga. Smaller numbers told us they have profiles at places like Yahoo, Piczo, Gaiaonline and Tagged.com.

Also interesting is how young people use social networks. As reported in much of the qualitative and survey-based SNS research, the grooming of friendships is a key motivator for SNS use. According the the report, the sites are heavily used for low-intensity friendship connections – they present an easy and efficient way to keep in touch with friends new and old, from far and near. Additionally, teens are motivated to update their sites frequently, with the study reporting that “a social network profile is more engaging if it changes frequently.”

The Pew report also reflects how modes of communication and access are changing with social network adoption. Friend-to-friend contact is now occuring via SNS public and private messages (already been said many times before, but young people don’t email). Additionally, students change their behavior based on access context – i.e. school users vs. those who can access SNS at home.

The report includes some valuable summary statistics, including the following I found interesting:

  • 55% of online teens have created a personal profile online, and 55% have used social networking sites like MySpace or Facebook.
  • 37% of 12 and 13 year olds have SNS profiles.
  • Seven out of ten (70%) online girls 15-17 have created a profile, compared with 57% of older boys.
  • Almost half of social network-using teens visit the sites either once a day (26%) or several times a day (22%).

Among many things, this report reinforces the ubiquity of social networks. If I had to come up with a 10,000 foot overview of this report, it would be “young people are using social networks all the time, for everything.” At the same time, there are a number of interesting between-gender effects in the statistics. As it becomes clear that females and males use SNS differently, what does this mean for researchers and those developing commercial applications? All in all, it is a very interesting report, kudos to Amanda Lenhart and Mary Madden for their good work. You can pick it up free at the Pew site.

[1] 77% of teens report having a publicly viewable profile, 40% of which say it is viewable by all persons. This leaves 30.8% of the total with true publicly viewable profiles.


31
Oct 06

Friendship in Youth Social Networking

I came across a Harris Interactive poll entitled Friendship in the Age of Social Networking Websites that contained an interesting statistic – the average number of friends teens keep on respective buddy lists.

The poll found that teen have an average of 52 friends on the IM buddy list, 38 friends entered in their cell phone – but they have 75 friends in SNS. The poll also found a 75% of teens use SNS. This is a useful point of comparison for researchers interested in the nature of friendship on SNS. Are there transferable ratios between various communication devices that hold steady for young people? Can this shine light onto how many “real” friends teens have in social networking services?

In Ling and Yttri’s chapter “Control, Emancipation and Status: The Mobile Telephone in the Teen’s Parental and Peer Group Control Relationships”, they showed that the average Norwegian teen (groups 13-15 and 16-19) had 90 friends in their register. On a weekly basis, they called little under 10% of those individuals. On a monthly basis, that ratio rose to about 25%. Of course, using a phone call as a measure of frienship is suspect – we likely have plenty of friends that we don’t call often, and this doesn’t make them less of a friend. However, the statistic is useful as it shows with how many of those friends teens are maintaining active relationships.

The other statistic from the Harris poll that interested me was a question about what types of friends teens and young people have. The poll found that for children 8-12, only 8% had friends who they only knew online (web friends), but that number grew to 36% for teens 13-18. The poll also found that 37% of children 8-12 actively maintain online/offline frienships.


25
Sep 06

Pew: Will transparency make the world a better place?

The Pew Internet and American Life project released Part II of its Future of the Internet report. Run by Janna Anderson and Lee Rainie, the content aggregated in this report is simply worth its weight in gold. In the study, Pew brought together a number of highly respected experts and asked them to respond to some possible scenarios. While the report as a whole is very useful, I felt that section 4 of the report would be of interest to readers.

Pew posed the following question:

As sensing, storage and communication technologies get cheaper and better, individuals’ public and private lives will become increasingly ‘transparent’ globally. Everything will be more visible to everyone, with good and bad results. Looking at the big picture – at all of the lives affected on the planet in every way possible – this will make the world a better place by the year 2020. The benefits will outweigh the costs.

The respondents split, with 46% agreeing and 49% disagreeing. Personally, I’m blown away that half of Pew’s expert panel seems to accept the underlying assumption of the question – that privacy won’t really be an option in 2020. Pew, explaining the current status of surveillance issues, states:

Your life is being recorded in various ways today. Your cell phone is a tracking device. Your personal life and financial status are recorded in various databases. Anyone in the world can find out the tax-assessed value of your home with a 10-second internet search. And, with the further development of “IP on everything,” the concept that people and goods will be tagged and trackable on the network through the use of sensors, things are becoming more complex and more transparent simultaneously.

Billions of radio frequency ID (RFID) tags are already in use due to their growing adoption by retailers (such as Wal-Mart) and government agencies (such as the U.S. Department of Defense). The fairly inexpensive, nearly invisible devices are used as a means to improve efficiency. They can be used to track inventory, equipment and personnel; they may replace bar codes. One estimate finds that corporations making RFID devices will make more than $24 billion a year by 2016.

In a sense, we’re already living in this world. As I type this note, my computer is attached to an internet connection that records my presence; when I present a credit card at the store, I am further recorded – and who knows how many surveillance cameras record my every move. What we lack – what gives us this notion of privacy, is the fact the mesh network that would bring all of this information together doesn’t yet exist (outside of the NSA). How reminiscent of the Facebook feeds fiasco – yes, all my information is out there – but when it is in one place, I am no longer comfortable with it.

In the report, Cory Doctorow and Hal Varian weigh in on a social contract for privacy.

Boing Boing blogger Cory Doctorow, an EFF Fellow, wrote, “Transparency and privacy aren’t antithetical. We’re perfectly capable of formulating widely honored social contracts that prohibit pointing telescopes through your neighbours’ windows. We can likewise have social contracts about sniffing your neighbours’ network traffic.” And Hal Varian of Google and the UC-Berkeley wrote, “Privacy is a thing of the past. Technologically it is obsolete. However, there will be social norms and legal barriers that will dampen out the worst excesses.”

Barry Wellman explores the nature of power and privacy:

Barry Wellman, a researcher on virtual communities and workplaces and the director of NetLab at the University of Toronto, responded, “The less one is powerful, the more transparent his or her life. The powerful will remain much less transparent.”

A fascinating report. You can download a free copy at the Pew site, and you can view the complete remarks of the experts at this site. Note: Cross-blogged to the claimID blog.


8
Jan 06

Student Life on the Facebook

Over the course of the last semester, I have been analyzing the behavior of UNC-Chapel Hill students in social network communities. In case you’re not quite sure what social network communities (SNC’s) are, they are services like MySpace, Friendster, Orkut and Facebook. I am particularly interested in Facebook, primarily because it is so heavily used on campus. In a previous study, I found that 88 percent of freshmen on the UNC campus had active Facebook accounts. As one might imagine, any service that reaches 88 percent of our freshmen is worth trying to understand, so I devised a system to sample the Facebook on one week increments. In this post (which will be long, and is available for download as a white paper – pdf), I’ll explore some of my findings, share interesting data and trends, and provide some of my personal opinion on this Facebook phenomenon.

I hope that this post will be of use to students, faculty and administrators, as well as the general public as they attempt to understand the Facebook particularly, and SNC’s more generally. As with any new phenomenon that affects our life, we have many questions and search for answers; I hope to help get a discussion rolling. In the sense that this post may help at-stake participants better understand the service and its uses, I hope that it is beneficial to all.

First, a word about my methodology. For each week, all students that self-identified as undergraduates, class of 2009, were sampled. This means their profiles were inspected, and data elements were analyzed. There is no way to “prove” that the students who self-identity as freshmen are actually freshmen, so the data is limited in this sense. Second, it should be noted that when I talk about the behavior of “freshmen”, I am referring to the behavior of freshmen in the Facebook. I will refer to my population as “freshmen”, but I make no claim of knowledge of freshmen behavior outside the Facebook context. (Update – The margin of error if these findings were to be generalized to all freshmen at the university, would be as follows: the first week of the semester is +/- .74%, and at the last week is +/- .54%)

Additionally, as with any large scale sample, there may be data imperfections due to technical difficulties encountered during the sampling process. However, I feel confident that any data imperfections would be covered under a reasonable margin of error. I must also state that while the Facebook’s terms of service prohibit the copying of data from the Facebook to a third-party, I am claiming fair use of the aggregate data that you will see here. Other than “adoption” data, which is well-known already, none of the data here deals with the Facebook, only with how students use it. It is my goal to understand how students share information in SNC’s, and the Facebook provides my vector.

To begin, we will look at adoption trends in the Facebook. One of the thing that surprised me is that on the first day of school, 3193 freshmen reportedly had an account. This was over 85% of the entire freshman class, and many had been using the Facebook for many months. As it turns out, the months of June and July represent the greatest months of Facebook account creation.


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If we were to turn this data into a logistic S-curve, we would see a very characteristic adoption curve. To sign up with the Facebook, one needs a university email address to log in. When I compared my new account data to the dates of UNC’s orientations (held mainly during the months of June and July), I saw strong, direct correlations between orientation and account creation. Generally, the two days following orientation would represent a 200-500% percent increase of average daily account creation for the month. It became obvious that many students learned of the Facebook at orientation, most likely virally through friends, though it is also quite possible they learned of the service through semi-official means such as orientation leaders. Due to this, the students joined the site early, and were already comfortable users when school started.

Next, we will look at how use of the Facebook grew over the course of the semester. As I previously stated, on the first day of classes, 85% of freshmen had a Facebook account. Over the course of the semester, that number grew until over 94% of freshmen had a Facebook account. In the chart, we will look at how that trend, as well as examining the use of privacy in the Facebook.


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The blue line represents total accounts, and the pink line reflects total accounts that are not private, meaning anyone with a UNC Facebook account can view that profile. As the semester passed, students protecting their profile grew from 3.2% to 4.75%. It should be noted that these total account numbers represent a revision upward from my previous blog posting; the methodology has been revised in this analysis and is correct.

While the actual number of nodes (the freshmen) in the network did not grow substantially over the course of the semester, the number of edges (friendship connections) in the network did expand remarkably. As the freshmen made friends over the course of the semester, their social network size grew from 144,319 to 373,651 connections. The average number of friends a freshman on the Facebook had on day one was 46, and at the end of the semester, he or she had 111 friends. This might give us a picture of how many friends a freshman might make the first semester of college: 65.


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Of course, these 65 new friends can make an impact on the lives of freshmen. As the freshmen seek to stake out their identities, do they change dramatically over the course of the semester? The Facebook allows users to list their political orientation, which serves as, in my opinion, a very strong indicator of identity. One can orient an entire social experience around the philosophy of politics.

We all know that freshmen change dramatically in their first semester at college. However, I felt it might be interesting to see if they shift their political orientation in their first semester. Does college make Liberals even more Liberal? Does college make Conservatives more Liberal? These are spectrum questions, of course, and we all shift as we learn, but as it turns out, freshmen do not shift their political orientation during their first semester at college.


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In the graph above, the political orientation of campus is presented as a moving ratio. As you can see, over the course of the semester, the number of students identifying as Liberal decreases, and the number of students identifying as Conservative increases. This must be qualified, though. In the table below, which breaks out the exact percentages, you’ll see that the movement is quite marginal. (Update – The number of freshmen who report a political orientation are a subset of all freshmen who use facebook; the margin of error at the first week of the study is +/- 1.04, and at the end of the semester is +/- .98. The margin of error if these findings were to be generalized to all freshmen at the university, would be as follows: the first week of the semester is +/- 1.28%, and at the last week is +/- 1.12%.)

Political Orientation Campus Share, First Week Campus Share, Last Week
Very Liberal 4.75% 5.0%
Liberal 33.58% 32.91%
Moderate 27.77% 26.78%
Conservative 26.46% 26.74%
Very Conservative 1.14% .99%
Libertarian 1.39% 1.83%
Apathetic/Other 4.89% 5.73%

It should also be noted that this data has severe limitations. It does not actually reflect individual changes – if two students switch political identity from opposing parties, they cancel each other out in this estimate. This chart would only catch mass trends on campus (a liberalization, etc). I plan to explore this data in more detail later in this post, and in additional, follow-on postings.

In a previous study, I analyzed how much information students shared in SNC’s (pdf). I extended this study to see how much information the students were sharing in the Facebook. Certain things, like name, school email, join and last update date are almost always shown. But what about optional identity information?


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In this graph, we see the percentage of freshmen sharing identity elements that I felt were interesting. It amazes me how much potentially sensitive information is openly shared. For example, you can find out the birthday, hometown, sexual orientation (indicated through a field labeled “interested in”), relationship status and political orientation of 3/4 or more of all students. Of course, there is no guarantee that any of this information is truthful – but in the eyes of employers or people who don’t know you well, does that matter?

On the previous graph, you will also see Photo Albums – a handy and extremely well-done feature added by the Facebook towards the end of the semester. Nearly 45 percent of freshmen have Facebook photo albums, an adoption trend I find interesting. What was very interesting is that the Facebook allows you to tag your photos with the names of other people in the photos, and that allows your photo gallery to include not just pictures by you, but pictures of you by other people. In the following chart, the total number of persons shown in Facebook pictures is graphed. Please note, this is not a tally of all pictures, but of all pictures and tags. In just 8 weeks, the total number exploded from 9,783 to 78,413 – almost a nine-fold increase in volume, or an average of 23 pictures/tags a person!


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As you see the trends, it becomes evident that Facebook is a very important part of a freshman’s life. To that extent, I found that nearly 50% of all freshmen had updated their account in the last week, proving the service to be extremely sticky. Extending that time period to two weeks, greater than 67% of freshman had updated their profiles in that time period. The wall, which allows students to post public messages to each other, has 202,879 public messages to freshmen – or almost 60 per individual. Without question, the Facebook is an important resource for the freshmen, and it is used extremely often.

I’ll conclude this report by indulging myself with some political demographic analysis. As we’ve seen, the Facebook allows students the ability to classify themselves by political orientation. I thought it might be neat to place the Liberal and Conservative bloc’s next to each other, to see what I could find out.

The first thing I did was compare friend network sizes. I wanted to see who had more friends – liberals or conservatives. As it turns out, freshmen who are liberal have an average of 115.4 friends, while freshmen who are conservative have an average of 117.6 friends. The conservatives, it appears, are better at making friends than liberals by a 2.2 person margin!

Finally, I looked at some of the “favorites” of liberal and conservative freshmen. Facebook allows users the ability to list their favorite things – movies, music and books. I decided to compare the right and the left, so I conducted a little one-time pulse-like analysis of the student favorites. The results are below.

Favorite Books

Rank Liberal Conservative
1 Harry Potter Bible
2 Catcher in the Rye Harry Potter
3 The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby
4 1984 To Kill a Mockingbird
5 To Kill a Mockingbird Da Vinci Code
6 Da Vinci Code Pride and Prejudice
7 Pride and Prejudice Angels and Demons
8 Siddhartha Catcher in the Rye
9 The Giver The Notebook
10 Angels and Demons Lord of the Rings

Favorite Movies

Rank Liberal Conservative
1 Garden State The Notebook
2 Fight Club Anchorman
3 Donnie Darko Wedding Crashers
4 Anchorman Old School
5 Office Space Gladiator
6 The Notebook Dumb and Dumber
7 Wedding Crashers Finding Nemo
8 Love Actually Dirty Dancing
9 Pulp Fiction Zoolander
10 Eternal Sunshine… How to Lose a Guy…

Favorite Music

Rank Liberal Conservative
1 Coldplay Jack Johnson
2 Jack Johnson Coldplay
3 The Beatles Rascal Flatts
4 The Killers Kenny Chesney
5 Dave Matthews The Killers
6 Bob Marley Oar
7 The Shins John Mayer
8 Modest Mouse James Taylor
9 Radiohead Switchfoot
10 Green Day Tim McGraw

Take from these what you will – the inbound data is not especially clean, and while I made every effort (and they look right, for the most part), there’s no guarantee these rankings are anywhere near perfect. What struck me about this data is that, for the most part, politics may divide us bitterly – but we actually share more in common than we might realize.

I’ll conclude this report by reminding the reader that this data represents only a very small demographic – one class of freshmen at one university in the Southeastern United States. This is not meant to be a representative study of anything more than the exact population it studied, though I wouldn’t be surprised if the use trends are similar across many, many campuses. It is important to note that this is not a study of the Facebook per se, but how students use social network services. It does not represent the Facebook as a part, or a whole. This is primarily a series of snapshots in time, showing how our freshmen use this extraordinarily successful service; hopefully from it the reader will take away a broader understanding.

Fred Stutzman is the author of this report and a Ph.D. student at the School of Information and Library Science at UNC-Chapel Hill. His research interests involve social software and networks, personal identity management, information retrieval and knowledge discovery. He can be contacted at fred@metalab.unc.edu with questions or comments. This report is available for download as a white paper (pdf). Thanks to John Joseph Bachir, Terrell Russell, and Gary Marchionini for assistance proofing, editing and refining this document.