The complementary relationship between the Internet and traditional mass media: the case of online news and information

Background. The question whether old media are driven out of existence by new media has been a long concern in academic and industrial research but has received no definitive answer. Aim. This paper goes beyond most previous studies of Internet impact on traditional media, which have placed their relationship within a competition-based framework, to specifically investigate the complementary effect of online news and information usage on traditional sources. Method. Secondary data analysis of a national survey of 4270 Australians conducted in late 2003, employing hypothesis testing for the mean, partial correlations, and a linear regression analysis. Results. Online news and information usage at different usage levels is positively associated with the use of traditional news and information sources, especially those that are more information-intensive. Those who relied on the Internet the most for news and information still used traditional sources substantially. Conclusion. The findings suggest that even if a displacement effect takes place, there will be no replacement (absolute displacement): traditional media will still exist to complement the Internet in serving human beings' news and information needs.

[1]  Jinok Son,et al.  A look at the constancy principle under changing market conditions , 1993 .

[2]  William C. Wood,et al.  Paying for the Video Revolution: Consumer Spending on the Mass Media , 1991 .

[3]  T. D. Wilson,et al.  Information behaviour: an interdisciplinary perspective , 1997, Inf. Process. Manag..

[4]  Charles R. Wright,et al.  Mass Communication: A Sociological Perspective , 1975 .

[5]  Philip Meyer,et al.  The Vanishing Newspaper: Saving Journalism in the Information Age , 2004 .

[6]  John Henningham,et al.  Australian Studies in Journalism , 1999 .

[7]  Reijo Savolainen Book Review: Looking for Information A Survey of Research on Information , 2003, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[8]  Dorothy A. Bowles,et al.  Impact of Internet on Use of Traditional News Media , 1995 .

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

[10]  Thomas D. Wilson,et al.  Electronic publishing and the future of the book , 1997, Inf. Res..

[11]  Louis Leung,et al.  Assessing the displacement effects of the Internet , 2008, Telematics Informatics.

[12]  Donald O. Case,et al.  Looking for Information: A Survey of Research on Information Seeking, Needs and Behavior , 2012 .

[13]  Everett M. Rogers,et al.  Communication Technology: The New Media in Society , 1986 .

[14]  Donald O. Case,et al.  Looking for Information , 2002 .

[15]  Michael Lynn James,et al.  An exploratory study of the perceived benefits of electronic bulletin board use and their impact on other communication activities , 1992 .

[16]  N. Nie,et al.  Internet Use, Interpersonal Relations, and Sociability: A Time Diary Study , 2008 .

[17]  Maxwell McCombs,et al.  Spending on Mass Media. , 1980 .

[18]  William C. Wood,et al.  Consumer Spending on the Mass Media: The Principle of Relative Constancy Reconsidered. , 1986 .

[19]  T. D. Wilson,et al.  Models in information behaviour research , 1999, J. Documentation.

[20]  K. Rosengren,et al.  Media gratifications research : current perspectives , 1985 .

[21]  John P. Robinson,et al.  The Changing Role of Newspapers in the Age of Television. Journalism Monographs No. 63. , 1979 .

[22]  August E. Grant,et al.  Media Functionality and the Principle of Relative Constancy: An Explanation of the VCR Aberration , 1997 .

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

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

[25]  Carolyn A. Lin Audience Attributes, Media Supplementation, and Likely Online Service Adoption , 2001 .

[26]  David J. Atkin,et al.  Understanding internet adoption as telecommunications behavior , 1998 .

[27]  D. McQuail McQuail's Mass Communication Theory , 2000 .

[28]  Scott L. Althaus,et al.  Please Scroll down for Article Political Communication Patterns of Internet and Traditional News Media Use in a Networked Community Patterns of Internet and Traditional News Media Use in a Networked Community , 2022 .

[29]  An Nguyen,et al.  Online News in Australia: patterns of uses and gratifications , 2005 .

[30]  David A. Patten Newspapers and New Media , 1986 .

[31]  An Nguyen The current status and potential development of online news consumption: A structural approach , 2003, First Monday.

[32]  Michel Dupagne,et al.  Testing the Relative Constancy of Mass Media Expenditures in the United Kingdom , 1994 .

[33]  Tom Standage The Victorian Internet: The Remarkable Story of the Telegraph and the Nineteenth Century's On-line Pioneers , 1998 .

[34]  E. Rogers,et al.  Diffusion of Innovations , 1964 .

[35]  Stephen Lacy,et al.  Theory, Economics, Measurement, and the Principle of Relative Constancy , 1997 .

[36]  R. LaRose,et al.  A Social Cognitive Theory of Internet Uses and Gratifications: Toward a New Model of Media Attendance , 2004 .

[37]  B. Wellman,et al.  The Global Villagers: Comparing Internet Users and Uses Around the World , 2008 .

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

[39]  Barbara Niedzwiedzka,et al.  A proposed general model of information behaviour , 2003, Inf. Res..

[40]  Michel Dupagne,et al.  Beyond the Principle of Relative Constancy: Determinants of Consumer Mass Media Expenditures in Belgium , 1997 .