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Internet influences on communities

A community is "a body of people or things viewed collectively".[1] According to [[Steven Brintgregates of people who share common activities and/or beliefs and who are bound together principally by relations of affect, loyalty, common values, and/or personal concern – i.e., interest in the personalities and life events of one another".[2]

Jenny Preece suggested to evaluate communities according to physical features: size, location and the boundaries that confined them.[3] When commuting became a way of life and cheaper transportation made it easier for people to join multiple communities to satisfy different needs, the strength and type of relationships among people seemed more promising criteria.[3]

Since social capital is built of trust, rules, norms and networks, it can be said that the social capital of communities has grown. The lower entrance barriers to the community have made it easier to be a part of many different communities. This goes hand in hand with Don Tapscott's theory of how the digital society has changed collaboration and innovation to a world of co-creation.[4]

From birth to death, people are shaped by the communities to which they belong, affecting everything from how they talk to whom they talk with.[5] Just like the telephone and the television changed the way people interact socially, computers have transformed communication and at the same time created new norms for social capital.

"A virtual community is a group of people who may or may not meet one another face to face, who exchange words and ideas through the mediation of computer bulletin board systems and other digital networks".[6] Along with the fact that computer usage has spread, the use of virtual communities have grown. Rheingold defines virtual communities as "social aggregations that emerge from the Net when enough people carry on those public discussions long enough, with sufficient human feeling, to form webs of personal relationships in cyberspace". Michael Porter describes a virtual community as "an aggregation of individuals or business partners who interact around a shared interest, where the interaction is at least partially supported and/or mediated by technology and guided by some protocols or norms".[7] Virtual communities consist of "people with shared interests or goals for whom electronic communication is a primary form of interaction" and have created new forms of collaboration.[8] "The most skilled and experienced members of the community provide leadership and help integrate contributions from the community as a whole. This way, virtual communities can use the voluntary motivations that exist in a community to assign the right person to the right task more effectively than traditional forms".[4]

According to Benkler, we can "see a thickening of the preexisting relations with friends and family, in particular with those who were hard to reach earlier".[9] "Also, we are beginning to see the emergence of a greater scope for limited-purpose, loose relationships. Although these may not fit the ideal model of virtual communities, they are effective and meaningful to their participants".

The heightened individual capacity that actually is a driving social force have raised concerns by many that the Internet is further fragmenting the community, making people spend their time in front of their computer instead of socializing with each other.[9] Empirical studies show, however, that we are using the Internet and communities at the expense of television, and that is an exchange that promotes social ties.

Social capital edit

Social capital is a concept built from the premise that some value emanates from social networking sites due to the social interaction which may have positive influence in the society of the individuals who belong to the group by facilitating coordinated actions (Putnam et al., 1993).[10][page needed] Simply put, social capital is “the ability of people to work together for some common purpose” (Rosenfeld, 1997). Trust, rules, norms and networks create social capital (Barr, 2000), Narayan (1997).[11][12]

Evaluation edit

A number of innovative ways have been employed to measure social capital, however, there is not a one true way of measuring it. First, the most comprehensive definitions of social capital are multidimensional, incorporating different levels and units of analysis. Second, any attempt to measure the properties of inherently ambiguous concepts such as "community", "network" and "organization" is correspondingly problematic. Third, few long-standing surveys were designed to measure "social capital", leaving contemporary researchers to compile indexes from a range of approximate items, such as measures of trust in government, voting trends, memberships in civic organizations, hours spent volunteering. New surveys currently being tested will hopefully produce more direct and accurate indicators.

Measuring social capital may be difficult, but it is not impossible, and several excellent studies have identified useful proxies for social capital, using different types and combinations of qualitative, comparative and quantitative research methodologies .

Knack and Keefer (1997) used indicators of trust and civic norms from the World Values Survey for a sample of 29 market economies.[13] They used these measures as proxies for the strength of civic associations in order to test two different propositions on the effects of social capital on economic growth, the "Olson effects" (associations stifle growth through rent-seeking) and "Putnam effects" (associations facilitate growth by increasing trust). Inglehart (1997) has done the most extensive work on the implications of the WVS's results for general theories of modernization and development.[14]

Narayan and Pritchett (1997) construct a measure of social capital in rural Tanzania, using data from the Tanzania Social Capital and Poverty Survey (SCPS).[12] This large-scale survey asked individuals about the extent and characteristics of their associational activity, and their trust in various institutions and individuals. They match this measure of social capital with data on household income in the same villages (both from the SCPS and from an earlier household survey, the Human Resources Development Survey). They find that village-level social capital raises household incomes.

Temple and Johnson (1998), extending the earlier work of Adelman and Morris (1967), use ethnic diversity, social mobility, and the prevalence of telephone services in several sub-Saharan African countries as proxies for the density of social networks. They combine several related items into an index of "social capability", and show that this can explain significant amounts of variation in national economic growth rates.[15][16]

Measuring social capital may be difficult, but it is not impossible, and several excellent studies have identified useful proxies for social capital, using different types and combinations of qualitative, comparative and quantitative research methodologies (Woolcock and Narayan, 2000).[17]

How we[who?] measure social capital depends on how we define it. The most comprehensive definitions of social capital are multidimensional, incorporating different levels and units of analysis. Trust, civic engagement, and community involvement are generally seen as ways to measure social capital. Depending on the definition of social capital and the context, some indicators may be more appropriate than others. Once it has been decided which how social capital is to be measured, for example by measuring civic engagement through household surveys, cultural factors may be taken into account in designing the survey instrument. Newspaper readership may be a better indicator of civic engagement in Italy (Putnam, 1993) than in India because of the varying literacy rates.[10][page needed]

Measuring social capital among the poor, particularly studying the same households over time, is difficult because the poor are often involved in informal work, may not have a long-term address or may move.

Robert D. Putnam (2000) suggested a social capital concepts of bonding and bridging. Bonding is viewed as relations among members of the same community. Bridging is viewed as relationships between members among different communities.[18][page needed]

Influences on communities edit

Business 'cluster' is “used to represent concentrations of firms that are able to produce synergy because of their geographic proximity and interdependence” (Rosenfeld, 1997).[19] Steinfield, C. et al. (2010) found, that “the amount of perceived social capital significantly predicted market exposure” of company performance in a knowledge-intensive business cluster. Social capital strengthens regional production networks.[20]

The rate of networking (defined as various forms of strategic alliances and joint ventures) generally reflects the levels of social capital and trust that exists (Rosenfeld, 1997).[19] Robert Putnam (1993) found that stock of social capital predicts economic performance.[10][page needed] There is some evidence suggesting that social relationships play an important role in the survival of small businesses (Granovetter, 1984), yet the relative contribution of other factors, such as managerial skills and environmental context are unknown.[21]

At the institutional level, disciplinary climate and academic norms established by the school community and the mutual trust between home and school are major forms of social capital. These forms of social capital are found to contribute to student learning outcomes in East Asian countries such as Singapore, Korea, and Hong Kong. They have been shown to have a significant impact, not only on creating a learning and caring school climate, but also on improving the quality of schooling and reducing inequality of learning outcomes between social-class groups.

Information and communication technologies (ICT) affect various aspects of communities, including communications, social capital, friendships and trust. Internet has the most influence on communities due to its interactive nature and wide usage. According to Katz, Rice, Aspden (2001) “Internet has unique, even transformational qualities as a communication channel, including relative anonymity and the ability to easily link with others who have similar interests, values, and beliefs”.[22]

Internet, and computer-mediated communication supports and accelerates ways how people operate at the centers of partial, personal communities, and switching rapidly and frequently between different groups (Wellman, 1996).[23] Internet usage is associated with positive and negative aspects for communities.

For example, Bargh and McKenna (2004) claim that “Internet use does not appear to weaken the fabric of neighborhoods and communities”.[24] Galston (1999) claims, that Internet is “capable of promoting a kind of socialization and moral learning through mutual adjustment”.[25]

Kavanaugh and Patterson (2001) did not find that increased Internet usage increased community involvement and attachment. According to Gilleard, C. et al. (2007), “ownership and use of domestic information and communication technology reduces the sense of attachment to the local neighborhood among individuals 50 and older in England.” But they continue that “domestic information and communication technology may be more liberating of neighborhood boundedness than destructive of social capital.”[26]

Anonymity is often mentioned in popular media as a possible cause for negative effects. But according to Bargh and McKenna (2004), anonymity also associated with positive effects: “research has found that the relative anonymity aspect encourages self-expression, and the relative absence of physical and nonverbal interaction cues (e.g., attractiveness) facilitates the formation of relationships on other, deeper bases such as shared values and beliefs.”[24]

Pigg and Crank (2004) suggest how Internet can facilitate interaction within members of community.[27] They suggest a concept of “reciprocity transaction”, that implies that “one person provides something of value to another in expectation that, at some point in time, the other person will act similarly”. It is suggested that ICT supports reciprocity transaction by providing social support or valuable information not available to public, and share meaning. Shared presence combined with depth of information provides shared meaning (Miranda and Saunders, 2003).[28]

Internet usage is generally not associated with decline in social contact. For example, Katz, Rice, Aspden (2001) found that Internet users were more likely to communicate with others through other media (especially telephone) more than do nonusers, and Internet use was associated with greater levels of social interaction (although this was more widely dispersed).[22] Thy claim, that “Internet use does not appear to weaken the fabric of neighborhoods and communities.” Ellison, Steinfield and Lampe (2007) claim that online interactions do not necessarily remove people from their offline world, but support relationships, especially when life changes move them away from each other. They say, that Internet “seems well-suited to social software applications because it enables users to maintain such ties cheaply and easily”.[29]

Internet-based communications is usually cheaper than phone, fax and letter-based communications, and are regarded as cheap to keep up with family and friends abroad (Foley, 2004), to keep up with business friends (e.g. Molony, 2009).[30][31]

Galston (1999) suggested an approach to analyze virtual communities based on entry and exist costs: “when barriers to leaving old groups and joining new ones are relatively low, exit will tend to be the preferred option; as these costs rise, the exercise of voice becomes more likely.”[25] He suggested, that “exit [from community] will be the predominant response to dissatisfaction”. Also, “virtual communities do not promote the development of voice; because they emphasize personal choice, they do not acknowledge the need for authority”, and do not foster mutual obligation.[25]

Influences on family, friends and neighbors edit

Positive Internet usage on relationships between family members and friends were found. For example, Bargh and McKenna (2004) wrote that “Internet, mainly through e-mail, has facilitated communication and thus close ties between family and friends, especially those too far away to visit in person on a regular basis”.[24]

ICT helps to create friendships. “When Internet-formed relationships get close enough (i.e., when sufficient trust has been established), people tend to bring them into their “real world”—that is, the traditional face-to-face and telephone interaction sphere” (Bargh, McKenna, 2004.)[24] “Internet facilitates new connections, in that it provides people with an alternative way to connect with others who share their interests or relational goals” (Ellison, Heino, & Gibbs, 2006).[32]

Cummings, Lee and Kraut (2006) found that students who move off to college “communicating with these friends prevents the relationships from declining as swiftly as they otherwise would. Communication seems to inject energy into a relationship and prevents it from going dormant.” Email and instant messaging are found to be especially useful.[33]

Hampton and Wellman (2001) found that, in a wired community, many neighbors got to know each other better through the use of a local computer network.[34] But according to Katz (2001), “use of the Internet per se is not associated with different levels of awareness of one’s neighbors”.[22]

Influences on social network edit

Social networks play increasingly larger role for Internet users. According to Castells (1999), “social networks substitute for communities, with locally based communities being one of the many possible alternatives for the creation and maintenance of social networks, and the Internet providing another such alternative.”[35]

Social networks provide possibilities to create new relationships, and to maintain existing ones. According to Lampe, Ellison, Steinfield (2007), users of a popular social network Facebook mainly use the network to learn more about people they meet offline, and are less inclined to initiate new connections: “Facebook members seem to be using Facebook as a surveillance tool for maintaining previous relationships, and as a “social search” tool by which they investigate people they've met offline”.[29]

Connections formed online sometimes are transformed to off-line personal relationships. Parks and Floyd (1996) report that 60% of their random sample “reported that they had formed a personal relationship of some kind with someone they had first contacted through a newsgroup”, and that “relationships that begin on line rarely stay there”.[36]

Privacy issues are commonly reported in popular media. According to Gross and Acquisti (2005), “many individuals in a person’s online extended network would hardly be defined as actual friends by that person; in fact many may be complete strangers.[37] And yet, personal and often sensitive information is freely and publicly provided.” Therefore, users potentially expose themselves to physical and cyber risks.

Influences on social capital edit

Internet usage can cause multiple effects for social capital, and its effects are not yet clear. For example, Pigg & Crank (2004) suggest that studies of relationship between online networks and social capital is still too much in their infancy to reach any useful conclusions.[27] Although it is generally thought that Internet affects social capital, “mechanisms are unclear” (Hampton, Wellman, 1999).[38]

Internet usage can both increase and decrease social capital: “people engage in social and asocial activities when online” (Hampton, Wellman, 1999).[38]

For example, Nie (2001) claims that social capital can be decreased: “Internet use may actually reduce interpersonal interaction and communication”.[39] He also claims, that “Internet users do not become more sociable; rather, they already display a higher degree of social connectivity and participation”.[39] Hampton, Wellman (1999) claims, that “increased connectivity and involvement not only can expose people to more contact and more information, it can reduce commitment to community”, because “immersiveness can turn people away from community”.[38]

Some researchers claim that social capital can be increased by Internet usage. For example, Ellison, Heino, & Gibbs (2006) claim that “Internet facilitates new connections, in that it provides people with an alternative way to connect with others who share their interests or relational goals”.[32] Hampton, Wellman (1999) state that Internet supplements network capital “by extending existing levels of face-to-face and telephone contact.”[38]

Reduction of communication costs increase the frequency and duration of communication, and increase social capital's bonding and bridging.

The Net is particularly suited to the development of multiple weak ties (Castells, 1999), thus expanding sociability beyond the socially defined boundaries of self-recognition.[35] Internet supports weak ties between individuals, which can the foundation for bridging social capital (Ellison, Steinfieldm, Lampe, 2007).[29] Resnick (2001) suggests that with the help of new technologies (e.g. distribution lists, photo directories, search) new forms of social capital occurs in online social network sites.[40] Ellison, Steinfield and Lampe (2007) suggest that intensity of Facebook use is positively associated with individuals’ perceived bridging social capital: for undergraduate students, there is a “strong association between use of Facebook and the three types of social capital, with the strongest relationship being to bridging social capital.[29]

According to Williams (2006), because of the low costs of communication, there might be more of the bridging function online than offline.[41] "The social capital created by these networks generates broader identities and generalized reciprocity". Williams (2006) suggested Internet Social Capital Scales (ICST) to measure social capital bridging and bonding.[41] Ellison, Steinfield and Lampe (2007) assessed social capital bonding by using ICST, and found, that “Facebook is indeed implicated in students’ efforts to develop and maintain bridging social capital at college, although we cannot assess causal direction.”[29]

Intensity of Facebook use was positively associated with individuals’ perceived bonding social capital (Ellison, Steinfield and Lampe, 2007).[29] But they also found, that bonding social capital was also predicted by high self-esteem, satisfaction with university life, as with use of Facebook. Therefore, high self-esteem, and satisfaction with university life are likely causes of perceived bonding social capital, and heavier Facebook use.

Friends use the Internet to maintain ties. “Internet is particularly useful for keeping contact among friends who are socially and geographically dispersed. ... Distance still matters: communication is lower with distant than nearby friends” (Hampton, Wellman, 1999).[38]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (2001)
  2. ^ Brint (2001)
  3. ^ a b Preece (2001)
  4. ^ a b Tapscott (2007)
  5. ^ Preece (2000)
  6. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica (2011)
  7. ^ Porter (2001)
  8. ^ Dennis, Pootheri, Natarajan (1998)
  9. ^ a b Benkler (2006)
  10. ^ a b c Putnam et al. (1993)
  11. ^ Barr (2000)
  12. ^ a b Narayan (1997)
  13. ^ Knack and Keefer (1997)
  14. ^ Inglehart (1997)
  15. ^ Temple (1998)
  16. ^ Adelman and Morris(1967)
  17. ^ Woolcock and Narayan (2000)
  18. ^ Putnam (2000)
  19. ^ a b Rosenfeld (1997)
  20. ^ Steinfield, et al. (2010)
  21. ^ Granovetter (1984)
  22. ^ a b c Katz, Rice, Aspden (2001)
  23. ^ Wellman (1996)
  24. ^ a b c d Bargh and McKenna (2004)
  25. ^ a b c Galston (1999)
  26. ^ Kavanaugh and Patterson (2001)
  27. ^ a b Pigg and Crank (2004)
  28. ^ Miranda and Saunders (2003)
  29. ^ a b c d e f Ellison, Steinfield and Lampe (2007)
  30. ^ Foley (2004)
  31. ^ Molony (2009)
  32. ^ a b Ellison, Heino, & Gibbs(2006)
  33. ^ Cummings, Lee and Kraut (2006)
  34. ^ Hampton and Wellman (2001)
  35. ^ a b Castells (1999)
  36. ^ Parks and Floyd (1996)
  37. ^ Gross and Acquisti (2005)
  38. ^ a b c d e Hampton, Wellman (1999)
  39. ^ a b Nie (2001)
  40. ^ Resnick (2001)
  41. ^ a b Williams (2006)

References edit

  • Andrade, A. E., 2009. The Value of Extended Networks: Social Capital in an ICT Intervention in Rural Peru. Information Technology for Development, Vol. 15 (2), pp. 108–132.
  • Bargh, J. A., McKenna, J. Y. A., 2004. The Internet and Social Life. Annual Review of Psychology, Vol. 55, pp. 573–590.
  • Benkler, Y., 2006. The Wealth of Networks. Yale University Press. London.
  • Castells, M., 2010. The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture. Volume I: The Rise of the Network Society. John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
  • Ellison, N.B., Steinfieldm, C., Lampe, C., 2007. The Benefits of Facebook ‘‘Friends:’’ Social Capital and College Students’ Use of Online Social Network Sites. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, Vol. 12, pp. 1143–1168.
  • Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2011. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, Accessed 5 February 2011.
  • Foley, P., 2004. Does the Internet help to overcome social exclusion? Electronic Journal of e-government, pp. 139–146.
  • Freitag, M. (2003). Beyond Tocqueville: The Origins of Social Capital in Switzerland. European Sociological Review, Vol. 19, No. 2, pp. 217 – 232.
  • Galston, W. A., 2000. Does the Internet Strengthen Community? National Civic Review, Vol. 89, No. 3, pp. 193–202.
  • Gilleard, C., et al. Community and Communication in the Third Age: The Impact of Internet and Cell Phone Use on Attachment to Place in Later Life in England[dead link]. The Journals of Gerontology: Series B, Vol. 62, Issue 4.
  • Granovetter, Mark. 1984. Small is bountiful: labor markets and establishment size. American Sociological Review, Vol. 49, pp. 323–334.
  • Gross, R., Acquisti, A., 2005. Information Revelation and Privacy in Online Social Networks. Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society (WPES), 2005.
  • Hampton, K., Wellman, B., 1999. Netville Online and Offline: Observing and Surveying a Wired Suburb. American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 43, Issue 3, pp. 475–492.
  • Jahnke, I., 2009. Dynamics of social roles in a knowledge management community. Computers in Human Behavior, Vol. 26, pp. 533–546.
  • Katz, J.E., Rice, R.E., Aspden, P., 2001. The Internet, 1995-2000. American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 45, No. 3, pp. 405–419.
  • Kavanaugh, A.L., Patterson, S.J., 2001. The Impact of Community Computer Networks on Social Capital and Community Involvement. American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 45, pp. 496–509.
  • Knack, Stephen & Keefer, Philip, 1997. Does Social Capital Have an Economic Payoff? A Cross-Country Investigation, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, MIT Press, vol. 112(4), pages 1251-88, November.
  • Lampe, C., Ellison N., Steinfield, C., 2006. A Face(book) in the Crowd: Social Searching vs. Social Browsing'. CSCW'06, November 4–8, 2006
  • Miranda, S. M., Saunders, C. S., 2003. The Social Construction of Meaning: An Alternative Perspective on Information Sharing. Information Systems Research, Vol. 14, Issue 1, pp. 87–106.
  • Molony, T., 2009. Carving a Niche: ICT, Social Capital, and Trust in the Shift from Personal to Impersonal Trading, Information Technology for Development, Vol. 15 (4), pp. 283–301.
  • Narayan, 1997. Voices of the Poor, Poverty and Social Capital in Tanzania. World Bank, Washington D.C., USA.
  • Nie, N. H., 2001. Sociability, Interpersonal Relations, and the Internet. American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 45, No. 3, pp. 420–435.
  • Oxford English Dictionary, 2011, Accessed 5 February 2011.
  • Parks, M. R., & Floyd, K., 1996. Making friends in cyberspace. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, Vol. 1, Issue 4.
  • Pigg, K.E., Crank, L. D., 2004. Building Community Social Capital: The Potential and Promise of Information and Communications Technologies. The Journal of Community Informatics, (2004), Vol. 1, Issue 1, pp. 58–73.
  • Preece, J. (2000) Online communities: Designing usability, supporting sociability. Wiley. ISBN 978-0471805991
  • Putnam, R., 1993. Making Democracy Work Civic Traditions in Modern Italy. Princeton Press. ISBN 9780691037387
  • Putnam, R. D., 2000. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. Simon & Schuster.
  • Rosenfeld, A. A., 1997. Bringing Business Clusters into the Mainstream of Economic Development. European Planning Studies, Vol. 5, No. 1. doi:10.1080/09654319708720381
  • Steinfield, C., et al., 2010. Social capital, ICT use and company performance: Findings from the Medicon Valley Biotech Cluster. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, Vol. 77, pp. 1156–1166.
  • Tapscott, D. (2007). Wikinomics: How mass collaboration changes everything. Atlantic books. London.
  • Wellman, B., et al., 2001. Does the Internet Increase, Decrease, or Supplement Social Capital? - Social Networks, Participation, and Community Commitment. American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 45, pp. 436–455.

internet, influences, communities, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, e. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style July 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too long Please edit it to move non essential details to the body or discuss this on the talk page See the lead section guidelines June 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message A community is a body of people or things viewed collectively 1 According to Steven Brintgregates of people who share common activities and or beliefs and who are bound together principally by relations of affect loyalty common values and or personal concern i e interest in the personalities and life events of one another 2 Jenny Preece suggested to evaluate communities according to physical features size location and the boundaries that confined them 3 When commuting became a way of life and cheaper transportation made it easier for people to join multiple communities to satisfy different needs the strength and type of relationships among people seemed more promising criteria 3 Since social capital is built of trust rules norms and networks it can be said that the social capital of communities has grown The lower entrance barriers to the community have made it easier to be a part of many different communities This goes hand in hand with Don Tapscott s theory of how the digital society has changed collaboration and innovation to a world of co creation 4 From birth to death people are shaped by the communities to which they belong affecting everything from how they talk to whom they talk with 5 Just like the telephone and the television changed the way people interact socially computers have transformed communication and at the same time created new norms for social capital A virtual community is a group of people who may or may not meet one another face to face who exchange words and ideas through the mediation of computer bulletin board systems and other digital networks 6 Along with the fact that computer usage has spread the use of virtual communities have grown Rheingold defines virtual communities as social aggregations that emerge from the Net when enough people carry on those public discussions long enough with sufficient human feeling to form webs of personal relationships in cyberspace Michael Porter describes a virtual community as an aggregation of individuals or business partners who interact around a shared interest where the interaction is at least partially supported and or mediated by technology and guided by some protocols or norms 7 Virtual communities consist of people with shared interests or goals for whom electronic communication is a primary form of interaction and have created new forms of collaboration 8 The most skilled and experienced members of the community provide leadership and help integrate contributions from the community as a whole This way virtual communities can use the voluntary motivations that exist in a community to assign the right person to the right task more effectively than traditional forms 4 According to Benkler we can see a thickening of the preexisting relations with friends and family in particular with those who were hard to reach earlier 9 Also we are beginning to see the emergence of a greater scope for limited purpose loose relationships Although these may not fit the ideal model of virtual communities they are effective and meaningful to their participants The heightened individual capacity that actually is a driving social force have raised concerns by many that the Internet is further fragmenting the community making people spend their time in front of their computer instead of socializing with each other 9 Empirical studies show however that we are using the Internet and communities at the expense of television and that is an exchange that promotes social ties Contents 1 Social capital 1 1 Evaluation 1 2 Influences on communities 1 3 Influences on family friends and neighbors 1 4 Influences on social network 1 5 Influences on social capital 2 See also 3 Notes 4 ReferencesSocial capital editSocial capital is a concept built from the premise that some value emanates from social networking sites due to the social interaction which may have positive influence in the society of the individuals who belong to the group by facilitating coordinated actions Putnam et al 1993 10 page needed Simply put social capital is the ability of people to work together for some common purpose Rosenfeld 1997 Trust rules norms and networks create social capital Barr 2000 Narayan 1997 11 12 Evaluation edit A number of innovative ways have been employed to measure social capital however there is not a one true way of measuring it First the most comprehensive definitions of social capital are multidimensional incorporating different levels and units of analysis Second any attempt to measure the properties of inherently ambiguous concepts such as community network and organization is correspondingly problematic Third few long standing surveys were designed to measure social capital leaving contemporary researchers to compile indexes from a range of approximate items such as measures of trust in government voting trends memberships in civic organizations hours spent volunteering New surveys currently being tested will hopefully produce more direct and accurate indicators Measuring social capital may be difficult but it is not impossible and several excellent studies have identified useful proxies for social capital using different types and combinations of qualitative comparative and quantitative research methodologies Knack and Keefer 1997 used indicators of trust and civic norms from the World Values Survey for a sample of 29 market economies 13 They used these measures as proxies for the strength of civic associations in order to test two different propositions on the effects of social capital on economic growth the Olson effects associations stifle growth through rent seeking and Putnam effects associations facilitate growth by increasing trust Inglehart 1997 has done the most extensive work on the implications of the WVS s results for general theories of modernization and development 14 Narayan and Pritchett 1997 construct a measure of social capital in rural Tanzania using data from the Tanzania Social Capital and Poverty Survey SCPS 12 This large scale survey asked individuals about the extent and characteristics of their associational activity and their trust in various institutions and individuals They match this measure of social capital with data on household income in the same villages both from the SCPS and from an earlier household survey the Human Resources Development Survey They find that village level social capital raises household incomes Temple and Johnson 1998 extending the earlier work of Adelman and Morris 1967 use ethnic diversity social mobility and the prevalence of telephone services in several sub Saharan African countries as proxies for the density of social networks They combine several related items into an index of social capability and show that this can explain significant amounts of variation in national economic growth rates 15 16 Measuring social capital may be difficult but it is not impossible and several excellent studies have identified useful proxies for social capital using different types and combinations of qualitative comparative and quantitative research methodologies Woolcock and Narayan 2000 17 How we who measure social capital depends on how we define it The most comprehensive definitions of social capital are multidimensional incorporating different levels and units of analysis Trust civic engagement and community involvement are generally seen as ways to measure social capital Depending on the definition of social capital and the context some indicators may be more appropriate than others Once it has been decided which how social capital is to be measured for example by measuring civic engagement through household surveys cultural factors may be taken into account in designing the survey instrument Newspaper readership may be a better indicator of civic engagement in Italy Putnam 1993 than in India because of the varying literacy rates 10 page needed Measuring social capital among the poor particularly studying the same households over time is difficult because the poor are often involved in informal work may not have a long term address or may move Robert D Putnam 2000 suggested a social capital concepts of bonding and bridging Bonding is viewed as relations among members of the same community Bridging is viewed as relationships between members among different communities 18 page needed Influences on communities edit Business cluster is used to represent concentrations of firms that are able to produce synergy because of their geographic proximity and interdependence Rosenfeld 1997 19 Steinfield C et al 2010 found that the amount of perceived social capital significantly predicted market exposure of company performance in a knowledge intensive business cluster Social capital strengthens regional production networks 20 The rate of networking defined as various forms of strategic alliances and joint ventures generally reflects the levels of social capital and trust that exists Rosenfeld 1997 19 Robert Putnam 1993 found that stock of social capital predicts economic performance 10 page needed There is some evidence suggesting that social relationships play an important role in the survival of small businesses Granovetter 1984 yet the relative contribution of other factors such as managerial skills and environmental context are unknown 21 At the institutional level disciplinary climate and academic norms established by the school community and the mutual trust between home and school are major forms of social capital These forms of social capital are found to contribute to student learning outcomes in East Asian countries such as Singapore Korea and Hong Kong They have been shown to have a significant impact not only on creating a learning and caring school climate but also on improving the quality of schooling and reducing inequality of learning outcomes between social class groups Information and communication technologies ICT affect various aspects of communities including communications social capital friendships and trust Internet has the most influence on communities due to its interactive nature and wide usage According to Katz Rice Aspden 2001 Internet has unique even transformational qualities as a communication channel including relative anonymity and the ability to easily link with others who have similar interests values and beliefs 22 Internet and computer mediated communication supports and accelerates ways how people operate at the centers of partial personal communities and switching rapidly and frequently between different groups Wellman 1996 23 Internet usage is associated with positive and negative aspects for communities For example Bargh and McKenna 2004 claim that Internet use does not appear to weaken the fabric of neighborhoods and communities 24 Galston 1999 claims that Internet is capable of promoting a kind of socialization and moral learning through mutual adjustment 25 Kavanaugh and Patterson 2001 did not find that increased Internet usage increased community involvement and attachment According to Gilleard C et al 2007 ownership and use of domestic information and communication technology reduces the sense of attachment to the local neighborhood among individuals 50 and older in England But they continue that domestic information and communication technology may be more liberating of neighborhood boundedness than destructive of social capital 26 Anonymity is often mentioned in popular media as a possible cause for negative effects But according to Bargh and McKenna 2004 anonymity also associated with positive effects research has found that the relative anonymity aspect encourages self expression and the relative absence of physical and nonverbal interaction cues e g attractiveness facilitates the formation of relationships on other deeper bases such as shared values and beliefs 24 Pigg and Crank 2004 suggest how Internet can facilitate interaction within members of community 27 They suggest a concept of reciprocity transaction that implies that one person provides something of value to another in expectation that at some point in time the other person will act similarly It is suggested that ICT supports reciprocity transaction by providing social support or valuable information not available to public and share meaning Shared presence combined with depth of information provides shared meaning Miranda and Saunders 2003 28 Internet usage is generally not associated with decline in social contact For example Katz Rice Aspden 2001 found that Internet users were more likely to communicate with others through other media especially telephone more than do nonusers and Internet use was associated with greater levels of social interaction although this was more widely dispersed 22 Thy claim that Internet use does not appear to weaken the fabric of neighborhoods and communities Ellison Steinfield and Lampe 2007 claim that online interactions do not necessarily remove people from their offline world but support relationships especially when life changes move them away from each other They say that Internet seems well suited to social software applications because it enables users to maintain such ties cheaply and easily 29 Internet based communications is usually cheaper than phone fax and letter based communications and are regarded as cheap to keep up with family and friends abroad Foley 2004 to keep up with business friends e g Molony 2009 30 31 Galston 1999 suggested an approach to analyze virtual communities based on entry and exist costs when barriers to leaving old groups and joining new ones are relatively low exit will tend to be the preferred option as these costs rise the exercise of voice becomes more likely 25 He suggested that exit from community will be the predominant response to dissatisfaction Also virtual communities do not promote the development of voice because they emphasize personal choice they do not acknowledge the need for authority and do not foster mutual obligation 25 Influences on family friends and neighbors edit Positive Internet usage on relationships between family members and friends were found For example Bargh and McKenna 2004 wrote that Internet mainly through e mail has facilitated communication and thus close ties between family and friends especially those too far away to visit in person on a regular basis 24 ICT helps to create friendships When Internet formed relationships get close enough i e when sufficient trust has been established people tend to bring them into their real world that is the traditional face to face and telephone interaction sphere Bargh McKenna 2004 24 Internet facilitates new connections in that it provides people with an alternative way to connect with others who share their interests or relational goals Ellison Heino amp Gibbs 2006 32 Cummings Lee and Kraut 2006 found that students who move off to college communicating with these friends prevents the relationships from declining as swiftly as they otherwise would Communication seems to inject energy into a relationship and prevents it from going dormant Email and instant messaging are found to be especially useful 33 Hampton and Wellman 2001 found that in a wired community many neighbors got to know each other better through the use of a local computer network 34 But according to Katz 2001 use of the Internet per se is not associated with different levels of awareness of one s neighbors 22 Influences on social network edit Social networks play increasingly larger role for Internet users According to Castells 1999 social networks substitute for communities with locally based communities being one of the many possible alternatives for the creation and maintenance of social networks and the Internet providing another such alternative 35 Social networks provide possibilities to create new relationships and to maintain existing ones According to Lampe Ellison Steinfield 2007 users of a popular social network Facebook mainly use the network to learn more about people they meet offline and are less inclined to initiate new connections Facebook members seem to be using Facebook as a surveillance tool for maintaining previous relationships and as a social search tool by which they investigate people they ve met offline 29 Connections formed online sometimes are transformed to off line personal relationships Parks and Floyd 1996 report that 60 of their random sample reported that they had formed a personal relationship of some kind with someone they had first contacted through a newsgroup and that relationships that begin on line rarely stay there 36 Privacy issues are commonly reported in popular media According to Gross and Acquisti 2005 many individuals in a person s online extended network would hardly be defined as actual friends by that person in fact many may be complete strangers 37 And yet personal and often sensitive information is freely and publicly provided Therefore users potentially expose themselves to physical and cyber risks Influences on social capital edit Internet usage can cause multiple effects for social capital and its effects are not yet clear For example Pigg amp Crank 2004 suggest that studies of relationship between online networks and social capital is still too much in their infancy to reach any useful conclusions 27 Although it is generally thought that Internet affects social capital mechanisms are unclear Hampton Wellman 1999 38 Internet usage can both increase and decrease social capital people engage in social and asocial activities when online Hampton Wellman 1999 38 For example Nie 2001 claims that social capital can be decreased Internet use may actually reduce interpersonal interaction and communication 39 He also claims that Internet users do not become more sociable rather they already display a higher degree of social connectivity and participation 39 Hampton Wellman 1999 claims that increased connectivity and involvement not only can expose people to more contact and more information it can reduce commitment to community because immersiveness can turn people away from community 38 Some researchers claim that social capital can be increased by Internet usage For example Ellison Heino amp Gibbs 2006 claim that Internet facilitates new connections in that it provides people with an alternative way to connect with others who share their interests or relational goals 32 Hampton Wellman 1999 state that Internet supplements network capital by extending existing levels of face to face and telephone contact 38 Reduction of communication costs increase the frequency and duration of communication and increase social capital s bonding and bridging The Net is particularly suited to the development of multiple weak ties Castells 1999 thus expanding sociability beyond the socially defined boundaries of self recognition 35 Internet supports weak ties between individuals which can the foundation for bridging social capital Ellison Steinfieldm Lampe 2007 29 Resnick 2001 suggests that with the help of new technologies e g distribution lists photo directories search new forms of social capital occurs in online social network sites 40 Ellison Steinfield and Lampe 2007 suggest that intensity of Facebook use is positively associated with individuals perceived bridging social capital for undergraduate students there is a strong association between use of Facebook and the three types of social capital with the strongest relationship being to bridging social capital 29 According to Williams 2006 because of the low costs of communication there might be more of the bridging function online than offline 41 The social capital created by these networks generates broader identities and generalized reciprocity Williams 2006 suggested Internet Social Capital Scales ICST to measure social capital bridging and bonding 41 Ellison Steinfield and Lampe 2007 assessed social capital bonding by using ICST and found that Facebook is indeed implicated in students efforts to develop and maintain bridging social capital at college although we cannot assess causal direction 29 Intensity of Facebook use was positively associated with individuals perceived bonding social capital Ellison Steinfield and Lampe 2007 29 But they also found that bonding social capital was also predicted by high self esteem satisfaction with university life as with use of Facebook Therefore high self esteem and satisfaction with university life are likely causes of perceived bonding social capital and heavier Facebook use Friends use the Internet to maintain ties Internet is particularly useful for keeping contact among friends who are socially and geographically dispersed Distance still matters communication is lower with distant than nearby friends Hampton Wellman 1999 38 See also editOnline community Tribe internet Online participation Social webNotes edit Oxford English Dictionary 2001 Brint 2001 a b Preece 2001 a b Tapscott 2007 Preece 2000 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2011 Porter 2001 Dennis Pootheri Natarajan 1998 a b Benkler 2006 a b c Putnam et al 1993 Barr 2000 a b Narayan 1997 Knack and Keefer 1997 Inglehart 1997 Temple 1998 Adelman and Morris 1967 Woolcock and Narayan 2000 Putnam 2000 a b Rosenfeld 1997 Steinfield et al 2010 Granovetter 1984 a b c Katz Rice Aspden 2001 Wellman 1996 a b c d Bargh and McKenna 2004 a b c Galston 1999 Kavanaugh and Patterson 2001 a b Pigg and Crank 2004 Miranda and Saunders 2003 a b c d e f Ellison Steinfield and Lampe 2007 Foley 2004 Molony 2009 a b Ellison Heino amp Gibbs 2006 Cummings Lee and Kraut 2006 Hampton and Wellman 2001 a b Castells 1999 Parks and Floyd 1996 Gross and Acquisti 2005 a b c d e Hampton Wellman 1999 a b Nie 2001 Resnick 2001 a b Williams 2006 References editAndrade A E 2009 The Value of Extended Networks Social Capital in an ICT Intervention in Rural Peru Information Technology for Development Vol 15 2 pp 108 132 Bargh J A McKenna J Y A 2004 The Internet and Social Life Annual Review of Psychology Vol 55 pp 573 590 Benkler Y 2006 The Wealth of Networks Yale University Press London Castells M 2010 The Information Age Economy Society and Culture Volume I The Rise of the Network Society John Wiley amp Sons Ltd Ellison N B Steinfieldm C Lampe C 2007 The Benefits of Facebook Friends Social Capital and College Students Use of Online Social Network Sites Journal of Computer Mediated Communication Vol 12 pp 1143 1168 Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2011 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Accessed 5 February 2011 Foley P 2004 Does the Internet help to overcome social exclusion Electronic Journal of e government pp 139 146 Freitag M 2003 Beyond Tocqueville The Origins of Social Capital in Switzerland European Sociological Review Vol 19 No 2 pp 217 232 Galston W A 2000 Does the Internet Strengthen Community National Civic Review Vol 89 No 3 pp 193 202 Gilleard C et al Community and Communication in the Third Age The Impact of Internet and Cell Phone Use on Attachment to Place in Later Life in England dead link The Journals of Gerontology Series B Vol 62 Issue 4 Granovetter Mark 1984 Small is bountiful labor markets and establishment size American Sociological Review Vol 49 pp 323 334 Gross R Acquisti A 2005 Information Revelation and Privacy in Online Social Networks Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society WPES 2005 Hampton K Wellman B 1999 Netville Online and Offline Observing and Surveying a Wired Suburb American Behavioral Scientist Vol 43 Issue 3 pp 475 492 Jahnke I 2009 Dynamics of social roles in a knowledge management community Computers in Human Behavior Vol 26 pp 533 546 Katz J E Rice R E Aspden P 2001 The Internet 1995 2000 American Behavioral Scientist Vol 45 No 3 pp 405 419 Kavanaugh A L Patterson S J 2001 The Impact of Community Computer Networks on Social Capital and Community Involvement American Behavioral Scientist Vol 45 pp 496 509 Knack Stephen amp Keefer Philip 1997 Does Social Capital Have an Economic Payoff A Cross Country Investigation The Quarterly Journal of Economics MIT Press vol 112 4 pages 1251 88 November Lampe C Ellison N Steinfield C 2006 A Face book in the Crowd Social Searching vs Social Browsing CSCW 06 November 4 8 2006 Miranda S M Saunders C S 2003 The Social Construction of Meaning An Alternative Perspective on Information Sharing Information Systems Research Vol 14 Issue 1 pp 87 106 Molony T 2009 Carving a Niche ICT Social Capital and Trust in the Shift from Personal to Impersonal Trading Information Technology for Development Vol 15 4 pp 283 301 Narayan 1997 Voices of the Poor Poverty and Social Capital in Tanzania World Bank Washington D C USA Nie N H 2001 Sociability Interpersonal Relations and the Internet American Behavioral Scientist Vol 45 No 3 pp 420 435 Oxford English Dictionary 2011 Accessed 5 February 2011 Parks M R amp Floyd K 1996 Making friends in cyberspace Journal of Computer Mediated Communication Vol 1 Issue 4 Pigg K E Crank L D 2004 Building Community Social Capital The Potential and Promise of Information and Communications Technologies The Journal of Community Informatics 2004 Vol 1 Issue 1 pp 58 73 Preece J 2000 Online communities Designing usability supporting sociability Wiley ISBN 978 0471805991 Putnam R 1993 Making Democracy Work Civic Traditions in Modern Italy Princeton Press ISBN 9780691037387 Putnam R D 2000 Bowling Alone The Collapse and Revival of American Community Simon amp Schuster Rosenfeld A A 1997 Bringing Business Clusters into the Mainstream of Economic Development European Planning Studies Vol 5 No 1 doi 10 1080 09654319708720381 Steinfield C et al 2010 Social capital ICT use and company performance Findings from the Medicon Valley Biotech Cluster Technological Forecasting amp Social Change Vol 77 pp 1156 1166 Tapscott D 2007 Wikinomics How mass collaboration changes everything Atlantic books London Wellman B et al 2001 Does the Internet Increase Decrease or Supplement Social Capital Social Networks Participation and Community Commitment American Behavioral Scientist Vol 45 pp 436 455 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Internet influences on communities amp oldid 1161650257, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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