Does the Internet make us lonely?
Author: Franzen A.
Source: European Sociological Review, Volume 16, Number 4, December 2000 , pp. 427-438(12)
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Abstract:
The Internet and its potential effects on society receive much attention in public discussions. Many discussants expect that the World Wide Web will enhance global trade of products and services and thus will increase economic wealth. However, social scientists are concerned with possible social side-effects of the Internet. Specifically, a recent experimental study by Robert Kraut et al. (1998) found that greater use of the Internet decreases communication within the family, diminishes the size of the subjects' local social networks, and increases feelings of loneliness and depression. This study sheds doubt on the generality of these findings. Results from a survey of 15 842 Internet users and a control group of 1196 non-users conducted in Switzerland suggest that Internet use neither decreases respondents' network size nor the time spent with friends. The study also shows that electronic mail is widely used and has positive effects on people's social networks. The study uses many socio-demographic control variables and statistical methods to control for simultaneity.
Language: English
Document Type: Original article
Affiliations: 1: Institute for Sociology, University of Berne, Lerchenweg 36, 3012 Berne, Switzerland
Publication date: 2000-12-01
"The ESR is worldwide the leading social science journal in the area of empirical, quantitative and comparative studies. It has an excellent track record of publishing cutting-edge research."
Karl Ulrich Mayer
Professor of Sociology
University of Constance, Germany
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Sociology
- By this author: Franzen A.

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