Ethnographic Research on the Experience of Japanese Elderly People Online

Elderly people in Japan are becoming part of virtual communities. This article explores the online experience of such people, how they interact with others and how they construct social support relationships via computer-mediated communication (CMC). This ethnographic research, through participant observation and in-depth interviews, reveals that these elderly people enjoy interaction in a variety of language forms, ranging from haiku to emoticons, by combining traditional text-based Japanese culture with a new virtual culture, despite the limitations of text-based communication. Also, both the immediacy and asynchrony of CMC helps them to construct real human relationships in the virtual community, including social connectedness to others as well as supportive and companionship relationships. The elderly people could create a sense of greater propinquity by sharing their old stories and memories.

[1]  Jan-Erik Ruth Psychological Functioning in Old Age and the Introduction of New Technology , 1984 .

[2]  Robert Alun Jones,et al.  The Ethics of Research in Cyberspace , 1994 .

[3]  R. Davis,et al.  Television and the older adult , 1971 .

[4]  B. Wellman,et al.  Social Impacts of Electronic Mail in Organizations: A Review of the Research Literature , 1995 .

[5]  Lee Komito,et al.  The Net as a Foraging Society: Flexible Communities , 1998, Inf. Soc..

[6]  M J Graney,et al.  Happiness and social participation in aging. , 1975, Journal of gerontology.

[7]  Brian McKenna,et al.  Virtual Community , 1998, Online Inf. Rev..

[8]  Felipe Korzenny,et al.  A Theory of Electronic Propinquity , 1978 .

[9]  Fay Sudweeks,et al.  How Do You Get a Hundred Strangers to Agree: Computer mediated communication and collaboration , 1996 .

[10]  Jeffrey Bierig,et al.  The Late Night Radio Talk Show as Interpersonal Communication , 1979 .

[11]  N. Fox,et al.  Gps in Cyberspace: The Sociology of a ‘Virtual Community’ , 1999 .

[12]  Janet M. Dixon,et al.  Predicting Seniors' Use of Cyberspace , 1997 .

[13]  Haya Bechar-Israeli,et al.  From "Bonehead" to "cLoNehEAd": Nicknames, Play and Identity on Internet Relay Chat , 2006, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[14]  Shelley J. Correll,et al.  THE ETHNOGRAPHY OF AN ELECTRONIC BAR , 1995 .

[15]  Z. Sardar alt.civilizations.faq cyberspace as the darker side of the West , 1995 .

[16]  Steven G. Jones Virtual Culture: Identity and Communication in Cybersociety , 1997 .

[17]  Luciano Paccagnella,et al.  Getting the Seats of Your Pants Dirty: Strategies for Ethnographic Research on Virtual Communities , 2006, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[18]  Ziauddin Sardar Cyberspace as the darker side of the West , 1995 .

[19]  N. Baym Interpreting Soap Operas and Creating Community: Inside a Computer-Mediated Fan Culture , 1993 .

[20]  G. O'keefe,et al.  More Than Just Talk: Uses, Gratifications, and the Telephone , 1995 .

[21]  A. Monk,et al.  Aging, Loneliness, and Communications , 1988 .

[22]  J. Fernback,et al.  There is a there there: Notes Toward a Definition of Cybercommunity , 1999 .

[23]  Katie J. Ward,et al.  Cyber-ethnography and the emergence of the virtually new community , 1999, J. Inf. Technol..

[24]  Linda M. Harasim,et al.  A Slice of Life in My Virtual Community , 1993 .

[25]  Steven G. Jones CyberSociety: Computer-Mediated Communication and Community , 1994 .

[26]  Annette N. Markham Life Online: Researching Real Experience in Virtual Space , 1998 .

[27]  R. Piirto Beyond Mind Games: The Marketing Power of Psychographics , 1991 .

[28]  David W. Park,et al.  Interpersonal Effects in Computer-Mediated Interaction , 1994 .

[29]  Thomas R. Lindlof,et al.  Media Ethnography in Virtual Space: Strategies, Limits, and Possibilities , 1998 .

[30]  Kimberly A. Neuendorf,et al.  Television viewing and self-concept of the elderly. , 1980, The Journal of communication.

[31]  Joseph Turow,et al.  Talk show radio as interpersonal communication , 1974 .

[32]  L. R. Shade High noon on the electronic frontier: Conceptual issues in cyberspace , 1997 .

[33]  Mike Featherstone,et al.  POST-BODIES, AGING AND VIRTUAL REALITY , 2003 .

[34]  Nessim Watson,et al.  Why we argue about virtual community: a case study of the Phish.net fan community , 1997 .

[35]  Teresa M. Harrison,et al.  Computer Networking and Scholarly Communication in the Twenty-First-Century University , 1996 .

[36]  David Myers “Anonymity is part of the magic”: Individual manipulation of computer-mediated communication contexts , 1987 .

[37]  Malcolm R. Parks Making Friends in Cyberspace , 1996, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[38]  K. Wright Computer-Mediated Social Support, Older Adults, and Coping. , 2000 .

[39]  L. Wenner,et al.  Functional analysis of TV viewing for older adults , 1976 .

[40]  M J Graney,et al.  Communications activity substitutions in aging. , 1974, The Journal of communication.

[41]  Kerry K. Osborne On golden cyberpond: Training America's elderly to use electronic mail , 1997 .

[42]  David Bollier 1989 Review Conference on New Electronic Technologies for the Elderly: Issues and Projects. Report of an Aspen Institute Conference (5th, Queenstown, Maryland, March 8-10, 1989). Communications and Society Forum Report #11. , 1989 .