Searching for Media Complementarity: Use of Social Network Sites and Other Online Media for Campaign Information Among Young Adults

Social network sites have recently garnered a great deal of attention from new media scholars. These sites are emerging as a source for political information among young adults. This study explores how use of social network sites by young adults for campaign information about the 2008 presidential primaries relates to their use of other internet media for information about the campaign, specifically: email, online campaign videos and news satire websites. Many scholars have debated the effect of new media on established media. This study tests the complementarity framework proposed by Dutta-Bergman (2004). The complementairty framework states that people who consume specific information through one medium are likely to consume that information about that specific topic in other media. This perspective propounds that new and established media, in terms use for content-specific information, do not compete but rather complement each other. The current study focuses on young adults who use social network sites, comparing those within this population who use these sites for campaign information and those who do not. Our results show that social network site use for campaign information is associated with use of email for campaign information. Social network site users of campaign information were more likely to also use email for campaign information than social network site users who do not use these sites for campaign information. Social network site use for campaign information was also associated with consumption of online campaign videos with users more likely to consume online campaign video than persons who do not use social network sites for campaign information. There was no relationship between social network site use for campaign information and use of news satire websites. These results demonstrate support for the complementarity framework in regard to use of email and consumption of online campaign videos but not for use of news satire websites. Our findings elucidate the role of social network sites in young adults' gathering of campaign information and are thus significant for new media scholars as well as political communication scholars. By highlighting how the use of different media for campaign information relates across the internet, insight is achieved into the role various media play for young adults coming of age in an increasingly complex mediascape.

[1]  John P. Robinson,et al.  The Personal Computer, Culture, and Other Uses of Free Time , 1999 .

[2]  Xiaomei Cai,et al.  An experimental examination of the computer’s time displacement effects , 2005, New Media Soc..

[3]  Mitchell Stephens,et al.  “Which Communications Revolution is it, Anyway?” , 1998 .

[4]  Don Tapscott,et al.  Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything , 2006 .

[5]  Cliff Lampe,et al.  The Benefits of Facebook "Friends: " Social Capital and College Students' Use of Online Social Network Sites , 2007, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[6]  Hao Xiaoming,et al.  Trends in Online Newspapers: A Look at the US Web , 1999 .

[7]  H. Stipp,et al.  The interactions between computer and television usage. , 1997 .

[8]  John P. Robinson,et al.  Mass Media Use and Social Life Among Internet Users , 2000 .

[9]  Michael A. Xenos,et al.  Communication and Citizenship: Mapping the Political Effects of Infotainment , 2005 .

[10]  D. Young Late-Night Comedy and the Salience of the Candidates' Caricatured Traits in the 2000 Election , 2006 .

[11]  Joseph M. Kayany,et al.  Displacement Effects of Online Media in the Socio-Technical Contexts of Households , 2000 .

[12]  S. Robert Lichter,et al.  The Political Content of Late Night Comedy , 2003 .

[13]  Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman Complementarity in Consumption of News Types Across Traditional and New Media , 2004 .

[14]  John P. Robinson TELEVISION AND LEISURE TIME: YESTERDAY, TODAY, AND (MAYBE) TOMORROW , 1969 .

[15]  Patricia Riley,et al.  Community or Colony: The Case of Online Newspapers and the Web , 2006, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[16]  Luisa Doldi,et al.  Civic Life Online: Learning How Digital Media Can Engage Youth , 2009 .

[17]  An Nguyen,et al.  The complementary relationship between the Internet and traditional mass media: the case of online news and information , 2006, Inf. Res..

[18]  Thomas J. Johnson,et al.  Wag the Blog: How Reliance on Traditional Media and the Internet Influence Credibility Perceptions of Weblogs Among Blog Users , 2004 .

[19]  Danah Boyd,et al.  Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship , 2007, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[20]  Danah Boyd,et al.  Friendster and publicly articulated social networking , 2004, CHI EA '04.

[21]  G. Stempel,et al.  Relation of Growth of Use of the Internet to Changes in Media Use from 1995 to 1999 , 2000 .

[22]  Jody C. Baumgartner,et al.  The Daily Show Effect , 2006 .

[23]  Eszter Hargittai,et al.  Whose Space? Differences Among Users and Non-Users of Social Network Sites , 2007, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[24]  D. Young,et al.  Late-Night Comedy in Election 2000: Its Influence on Candidate Trait Ratings and the Moderating Effects of Political Knowledge and Partisanship , 2004 .

[25]  John P. Robinson,et al.  Time for Life: The Surprising Ways Americans Use Their Time , 1998 .

[26]  Hermann A. Maurer,et al.  The Transformation of the Web: How Emerging Communities Shape the Information we Consume , 2006, J. Univers. Comput. Sci..

[27]  Brian D. Loader,et al.  Young citizens in the digital age : political engagement, young people and new media , 2007 .