I really help to answer question for discussion post about Overview of CTs

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10.1146/annurev.psych.55.090902.141922
Annu. Rev. Psychol. 2004. 55:573–90
doi: 10.1146/annurev.psych.55.090902.141922
c 2004 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved
Copyright °
First published online as a Review in Advance on July 11, 2003
THE INTERNET AND SOCIAL LIFE
John A. Bargh and Katelyn Y. A. McKenna
New York University, New York, New York 10003; email: john.bargh@nyu.edu,
kym1@nyu.edu
Key Words communication, groups, relationships, depression, loneliness
■ Abstract The Internet is the latest in a series of technological breakthroughs in
interpersonal communication, following the telegraph, telephone, radio, and television.
It combines innovative features of its predecessors, such as bridging great distances
and reaching a mass audience. However, the Internet has novel features as well, most
critically the relative anonymity afforded to users and the provision of group venues in
which to meet others with similar interests and values. We place the Internet in its historical context, and then examine the effects of Internet use on the user’s psychological
well-being, the formation and maintenance of personal relationships, group memberships and social identity, the workplace, and community involvement. The evidence
suggests that while these effects are largely dependent on the particular goals that users
bring to the interaction—such as self-expression, affiliation, or competition—they also
interact in important ways with the unique qualities of the Internet communication
situation.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 573
THE INTERNET IN HISTORICAL CONTEXT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 575
EFFECTS ON INTERPERSONAL INTERACTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 577
In the Workplace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 578
Personal (Close) Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 580
Group Membership and Social Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 582
Community Involvement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 584
THE MODERATING ROLE OF TRUST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 585
CONCLUSIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 586
INTRODUCTION
It is interactive: Like the telephone and the telegraph (and unlike radio or television), people can overcome great distances to communicate with others almost
instantaneously. It is a mass medium: Like radio and television (and unlike the
telephone or telegraph), content and advertising can reach millions of people at
the same time. It has been vilified as a powerful new tool for the devil, awash in
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pornography, causing users to be addicted to hours each day of “surfing”—hours
during which they are away from their family and friends, resulting in depression and loneliness for the individual user, and further weakening neighborhood
and community ties. It has been hailed by two U.S. presidents as the ultimate
weapon in the battle against totalitarianism and tyranny, and credited by Federal
Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan with creating a “new economy.” It was
denounced by the head of the Miss France committee as “an uncontrolled medium
where rumormongers, pedophiles, prostitutes, and criminals could go about their
business with impunity” after it facilitated the worldwide spread of rumors that
the reigning Miss France was, in fact, a man (Reuters 2001). “I’m terrified by this
type of media,” she said.
“It,” of course, is the Internet. Although some welcome it as a panacea while
others fear it as a curse, all would agree that it is quite capable of transforming
society. Hard-nosed and dispassionate observers have recently concluded that the
Internet and its related technologies
“. . . will change almost every aspect of our lives—private, social, cultural,
economic and political . . . because [they] deal with the very essence of human
society: communication between people. Earlier technologies, from printing
to the telegraph . . . have wrought big changes over time. But the social changes
over the coming decades are likely to be much more extensive, and to happen
much faster, than any in the past, because the technologies driving them are
continuing to develop at a breakneck pace. More importantly, they look as if
together they will be as pervasive and ubiquitous as electricity.” (Manasian
2003, p. 4)
The Internet is fast becoming a natural, background part of everyday life. In
2002, more than 600 million people worldwide had access to it (Manasian 2003).
Children now grow up with the Internet; they and future generations will take it
for granted just as they now do television and the telephone (Turow & Kavanaugh
2003). In California, 13-year-olds use their home computer as essentially another
telephone to chat and exchange “instant messages” with their school friends (Gross
et al. 2002). Toronto suburbanites use it as another means of contacting friends and
family, especially when distance makes in-person and telephone communication
difficult (Hampton & Wellman 2001). And people routinely turn to the Internet to
quickly find needed information, such as about health conditions and remedies, as
well as weather forecasts, sports scores, and stock prices.
This is not to say that Internet technology has now penetrated the entire planet
to a similar extent. For example, in 2001 only 1 in 250 people in Africa was an
Internet user, compared with a world average of 1 in 35, and 1 in 3 for North America and Europe. But the trend is clearly for ever-greater availability: The coming
wireless technology (see Geer 2000, p. 11) will enable people in developing countries, who lag behind the rest of the world in hardwired infrastructure, to leapfrog
technological stages and so come on-line much sooner than they would otherwise have been able to—much as eastern Europe in the 1990s, lacking extensive
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hardwire telephone infrastructure, leapfrogged directly to cell phones (Markoff
2002, Economist 2003a).
The main reason people use the Internet is to communicate with other people
over e-mail—and the principal reason why people send e-mail messages to others
is to maintain interpersonal relationships (Hampton & Wellman 2001, Howard
et al. 2001, McKenna & Bargh 2000, Stafford et al. 1999). As Kang (2000,
p. 1150) put it, “the ‘killer application’ of the internet turns out to be other human
beings.” But this was not so obvious to the early investors in the Internet—in
the 1990s telecom companies invested (and lost) billions of dollars in interactive
television and in delivering movies and video over the Internet. (Interestingly, the
original supposed “killer app” of the telephone also was to broadcast content such
as music, news, and stock prices—and its use in this manner persisted in Europe
up to World War II.)
No one today disputes that the Internet is likely to have a significant impact on
social life; but there remains substantial disagreement as to the nature and value
of this impact. Several scholars have contended that Internet communication is an
impoverished and sterile form of social exchange compared to traditional face-toface interactions, and will therefore produce negative outcomes (loneliness and
depression) for its users as well as weaken neighborhood and community ties.
Media reporting of the effects of Internet use over the years has consistently emphasized this negative view (see McKenna & Bargh 2000) to the point that, as a
result, a substantial minority of (mainly older) adults refuses to use the Internet
at all (Hafner 2003). Others believe that the Internet affords a new and different
avenue of social interaction that enables groups and relationships to form that otherwise would not be able to, thereby increasing and enhancing social connectivity.
In this review, we examine the evidence bearing on these questions, both from
contemporary research as well as the historical record.
THE INTERNET IN HISTORICAL CONTEXT
The Internet is but the latest in a series of technological advances that have changed
the world in fundamental ways. In order to gauge the coming impact of the Internet
on everyday life, and to help separate reality from hyperbole in that regard, it is
instructive to review how people initially reacted to and then made use of those
earlier technological breakthroughs.
First, each new technological advance in communications of the past 200
years—the telegraph, telephone, radio, motion pictures, television, and most recently the Internet—was met with concerns about its potential to weaken community ties (Katz et al. 2001, p. 406). The telegraph, by eliminating physical distance
as an obstacle to communication between individuals, had a profound effect on
life in the nineteenth century (Standage 1998). The world of 1830 was still very
much the local one it had always been: No message could travel faster than a
human being could travel (that is, by hand, horse, or ship). All this changed in
two decades because of Samuel Morse’s telegraph. Suddenly, a message from
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London to New York could be sent and received in just minutes (Spar 2001,
p. 60), and people could learn of events in distant parts of the world within hours
or days instead of weeks or months. There was great enthusiasm: The connection
of Europe and America in 1858 through the transatlantic cable was hailed as “the
event of the century” and was met with incredible fanfare. Books proclaimed that
soon the entire globe would be wired together and that this would create world
peace. According to one newspaper editorial, “it is impossible that old prejudices
and hostilities should longer exist, while such an instrument has been created for
the exchange of thought between all the nations of the earth” (Standage 1998,
pp. 82–83). At the same time, however, governments feared the potential of such
immediate communication between individual citizens. Tsar Nicholas I of Russia,
for example, banned the telegraph as an “instrument of subversion” (Spar 2001,
p. 31). Similar raptures and fears have often been expressed, in our time, about the
Internet as well.
The closest parallel to today’s Internet users were the telegraph operators, an
“on-line” community numbering in the thousands who spent their working lives
communicating with each other over the wires but who rarely met face to face.
They tended to use low-traffic periods to communicate with each other, sharing
stories, news, and gossip. Many of these working relationships blossomed into
romances and even marriages. For example, Thomas Edison, who began his career
as a telegraph operator, proposed to his wife Mina over the telegraph (Standage
1998, pp. 129–142). And today, worldwide, people send each other more than a
billion text messages each day from their mobile phones (Economist 2003b), in a
form of communication conceptually indistinguishable from the old telegraph.
The telephone—invented accidentally by Alexander Graham Bell in the 1880s
while he was working on a multichannel telegraph—transformed the telegraph
into a point-to-point communication device anyone could use, not only a handful
of trained operators working in code. The effect was to increase regular contact
between family, friends, and business associates, especially those who lived too far
away to be visited easily in person, and this had the overall effect of strengthening
local ties (Matei & Ball-Rokeach 2001). Nevertheless, concerns continued to be
raised that the telephone would harm the family, hurt relationships, and isolate
people—magazines of the time featured articles such as “Does the telephone break
up home life and the old practice of visiting friends?” (Fischer 1992).
The next breakthrough, radio, fared no differently. Like the wireless Internet
emerging today, radio freed communication from the restriction of hard-wired
connections, and was especially valuable where wires could not go, such as for
ship-to-shore and ship-to-ship communication. However, its broadcast capability
of reaching many people at once—thousands, even millions—was a frightening
prospect for governments of the time. When Marconi got off the ship in England
to demonstrate his new invention to the British, customs officials smashed his
prototype radio as soon as he crossed the border, “fearing that it would inspire
violence and revolution” (Spar 2001, p. 7). Eventually, however, radio brought the
world into everyone’s living room and so eliminated distance as a factor in news
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dissemination like never before. And indeed, it did soon prove to be a powerful
propaganda tool for dictators and democratically elected leaders alike.
But television had the greatest actual (as opposed to feared) impact on community life, because individuals and families could stay at home for their evening
entertainment instead of going to the theater or to the local pub or social club.
Sociologist Robert Putnam (2000) has documented the dramatic decrease in community involvement (such as memberships in fraternal organizations and bowling
leagues) since the introduction of television in the 1950s (see also DiMaggio et al.
2001). This negative effect of television viewing on the individual’s degree of
involvement in other, especially community, activities has been the basis for contemporary worries that Internet use might displace time formerly spent with family
and friends (e.g., Nie & Erbring 2000).
The Internet combines, for the first time in history, many of these breakthrough
features in a single communication medium. Like the telegraph and telephone,
it can be used for person-to-person communication (e.g., e-mail, text messages);
like radio and television, it can operate as a mass medium. And it can serve as a
fabulous global library as well—fully 73% of American college students now use
the Internet more than their university library for researching term papers (Jones
2002). As DiMaggio et al. (2001, p. 327) note, the variety of functions that the
Internet can serve for the individual user makes it “unprecedentedly malleable” to
the user’s current needs and purposes.
However, the Internet is not merely the Swiss army knife of communications
media. It has other critical differences from previously available communication
media and settings (see, e.g., McKenna & Bargh 2000), and two of these differences especially have been the focus of most psychological and human-computer
interaction research on the Internet. First, it is possible to be relatively anonymous on the Internet, especially when participating in electronic group venues
such as chat rooms or newsgroups. This turns out to have important consequences
for relationship development and group participation. Second, computer-mediated
communication (CMC) is not conducted face-to-face but in the absence of nonverbal features of communication such as tone of voice, facial expressions, and
potentially influential interpersonal features such as physical attractiveness, skin
color, gender, and so on. Much of the extant computer science and communications
research has explored how the absence of these features affects the process and
outcome of social interactions.
EFFECTS ON INTERPERSONAL INTERACTION
A good example of that approach is Sproull & Kiesler’s (1985) “filter model” of
CMC, which focuses on the technological or engineering features of e-mail and
other forms of computer-based communications. According to this perspective,
CMC limits the “bandwidth” of social communication, compared to traditional
face-to-face communication settings (or to telephone interaction, which at least
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occurs in real time and includes important nonverbal features of speech). Sproull
& Kiesler (1985) considered CMC to be an impoverished communication experience, with the reduction of available social cues resulting in a greater sense
or feeling of anonymity. This in turn is said to have a deindividuating effect on
the individuals involved, producing behavior that is more self-centered and less
socially regulated than usual. This reduced-information model of Internet communication assumes further that the reduction of social cues, compared to richer
face-to-face situations, must necessarily have negative effects on social interaction (i.e., a weaker, relatively impoverished social interaction). Note also that this
engineering or bandwidth model assumes that the “channel” effects of Internet
communication are the same for all users and across all contexts—in other words,
it predicts a main effect of communication channel.
Spears et al. (2002) contrasted the engineering model with the “social science”
perspective on the Internet, which assumes instead that personal goals and needs
are the sole determinant of its effects. [In the domain of communications research,
Blumler & Katz’s (1974) “uses and gratifications” theory is an influential version
of this approach.] According to this viewpoint, the particular purposes of the individuals within the communication setting determine the outcome of the interaction,
regardless of the particular features of the communication channel in which the
interaction takes place.
The third and most recent approach has been to focus on the interaction between
features of the Internet communication setting and the particular goals and needs
of the communicators, as well as the social context of the interaction setting (see
Bargh 2002, McKenna & Bargh 2000, Spears et al. 2002). According to this
perspective, the special qualities of Internet social interaction do have an impact
on the interaction and its outcomes, but this effect can be quite different depending
on the social context. With these three guiding models in mind, we turn to a review
of the relevant research.
In the Workplace
In the 1980s—before the Internet per se even existed—Sara Kiesler and her colleagues (e.g., Kiesler et al. 1984) pioneered research on the interpersonal effects
of e-mail communication within organizations and the workplace. Consistent with
their “limited bandwidth” model, one conclusion from their studies was that the
deindividuating nature of CMC produced an increase in aggressive and hostile exchanges between communication partners and a reduction in the usual inhibitions
that operate when interacting with one’s superiors. However, subsequent metaanalytic reviews of the CMC literature on this point by Walther et al. (1994) and
Postmes & Spears (1998) concluded that there was no overall main effect of CMC
to produce greater hostility and aggressiveness among communicants. Walther
et al. (1994) concluded that insults, name calling, and swearing in CMC were
“over-reported activities,” and a study by Straus (1997) comparing 36 CMC and
36 face-to-face three-person work groups similarly concluded that “the incidence
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of personal attacks in groups in either communication mode was exceedingly small
and was not associated with cohesiveness or satisfaction, suggesting further that
the impact of this behavior was trivial” (p. 255).
From the perspective of social identity theory, Spears and colleagues (e.g.,
Reicher et al. 1995, Spears et al. 2002) have argued that CMC is not so much
deindividuating as it is depersonalizing—that the decreased salience of personal
accountability and identity makes group-level social identities all the more important, so that the real effect of CMC is to increase conformity to those local group
norms. Thus, whether the depersonalizing effect of CMC leads to more negative
or more positive behavior relative to face-to-face interactions is said to depend on
the particular content of those group norms (Postmes & Spears 1998).
Two recent surveys of U.S. college students are relevant here: Cummings et al.
(2002, p. 104) found that e-mail was considered as useful as face-to-face interactions for getting work done and building school-related relationships; in the
Jones (2002) nationwide survey, 60% of college students reported that the Internet
(mainly e-mail) had been beneficial to their relationships with classmates, compared with just 4% who believed it had had a negative impact on those relationships.
An important use of CMC in the corporate world and elsewhere has been to
conduct negotiations between parties who are separated by physical distance (see
Carnevale & Probst 1997). Thompson and her colleagues (see Thompson & Nadler
2002 for a review) have conducted extensive research on the process and outcomes
of such negotiations, compared to those of traditional face-to-face negotiations,
and have noted several pitfalls and traps to watch out for. The main problem with
such “e-gotiation,” according to these researchers, is the implicit assumptions
people have concerning time delays in hearing back from their adversaries as well
as about the motivations of those adversaries. For example, people tend to assume
that the other party to the negotiation reads and is aware of the content of the e-mail
message one just sent to them as soon as that message is sent—thus any delays in
hearing back are attributed to stalling or intentional disrespect by the other party.
These findings of greater distrust over CMC compared to face-to-face negotiations
are the opposite of what is found in the domain of relationship formation on the
Internet (see next section), and therefore serve as an instructive example of how
the interpersonal effects of the Internet vary as a function of the social context.
Thompson and colleagues also report an intervention that seems to ameliorate
the negative, distrust-evoking nature of electronic negotiation: having the two
parties talk on the telephone prior to the start of the negotiations (Thompson &
Nadler 2002). Other studies also point to the transforming nature of telephone
interaction, as if the telephone were a bridge between the “virtual” and the “real.”
The Cummings et al. (2002) survey comparing on-line (Internet) with off-line
modes of communication grouped the telephone together with face-to-face as offline, and found that international bankers and college students alike considered
off-line communication more beneficial to establishing close social (as opposed to
work) relationships. Nie & Erbring (2000) similarly considered interacting over
the telephone to be “real” whereas Internet interaction was not; hence substituting
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e-mail for telephone contact was described as a “loss of contact with the social
environment.” And in the survey by McKenna et al. (2002, Study 1; see next
section) on close relationship formation among Internet newsgroup members, all
of those who eventually moved their Internet relationships to “real life” (face-toface) had first interacted with their partner on the telephone—no one went directly
from the Internet to a face-to-face meeting without first talking on the phone.
Personal (Close) Relationships
EFFECTS OF INTERNET USE ON EXISTING RELATIONSHIPS On no issue has research on the social effects of the Internet been more contentious than as to its effect on close relationships, such as those with family and friends. Two studies that
received considerable media attention were the HomeNet project by Kraut et al.
(1998) and the large-scale survey reported by Nie & Erbring (2000; also Nie 2001).
Both reports concluded that Internet use led to negative outcomes for the individual
user, such as increases in depression and loneliness, and neglect of existing close
relationships. However, nearly all other relevant studies and surveys—including
a follow up of the HomeNet sample by Kraut and his colleagues—reached the
opposite conclusion.
Kraut et al. (1998) followed a convenience sample of Pittsburgh residents and
their families who as of the mid 1990s did not yet have a computer in the home.
The researchers gave these families a computer and Internet access, and then found
after a two-year period a reliable but small increase in reported depression and
loneliness as a function of the amount of Internet use. However, a later follow-up
study of the same sample (Kraut et al. 2002) revealed that these negative effects
had disappeared, and instead across nearly all measures of individual adjustment
and involvement with family, friends, and community, greater Internet use was
associated with positive psychological and social outcomes. For example, the more
hours the average respondent spent on the Internet, the more (not less) time he or
she also spent face-to-face with family and friends.
In their press release, Nie & Erbring (2000) reported data from a U.S. nationwide
survey of approximately 4000 people, and concluded from those data that heavy
Internet use resulted in less time spent with one’s family and friends. On the surface,
this would seem to contradict the Kraut et al. (2002) conclusions (and those of
the studies reviewed below), but a closer look at the actual findings removes the
apparent contradiction. These reveal that over 95% of Nie & Erbring’s (2000)
total sample did not report spending any less time with family and friends because
of their Internet use; moreover, even among the heaviest users, 88% reported no
change in time spent with close others.
Several other national surveys have found either that Internet users are no less
likely than nonusers to visit or call friends on the phone, or that Internet users
actually have the larger social networks (DiMaggio et al. 2001, p. 316). Howard
et al. (2001) concluded from their large random-sample survey “the Internet allows
people to stay in touch with family and friends and, in many cases, extend their
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social networks. A sizeable majority of those who send e-mail messages to relatives
say it increases the level of communication between family members . . . these
survey results suggest that on-line tools are more likely to extend social contact
than detract from it” (p. 399). Wellman et al. (2001) similarly concluded from their
review that heavy users of the Internet do not use e-mail as a substitute for faceto-face and telephone contact, but instead use it to help maintain longer distance
relationships (Wellman et al. 2001, p. 450).
Nie (2001) has responded to his critics by arguing that time is a limited commodity, so that the hours spent on the Internet must come at a cost to other activities. “We would expect that all those spending more than the average of 10 hours a
week on the Internet would report substantially fewer hours socializing with family
members, friends, and neighbors. It is simply a matter of time” (p. 425). However,
in the Nie & Erbring (2000) results, the real and substantial decrease associated
with heavy Internet use was in watching television and reading newspapers, not in
social interaction with friends and family.
RELATIONSHIP FORMATION ON THE INTERNET In the original study in this research domain, Parks & Floyd (1995) administered a questionnaire concerning
friendship formation to people participating in Internet newsgroups (electronic
bulletin boards devoted to special interest topics). Results showed that on-line relationships are highly similar to those developed in person, in terms of their breadth,
depth, and quality. In another study, McKenna et al. (2002) surveyed nearly 600
members of randomly selected popular newsgroups devoted to various topics such
as politics, fashion, health, astronomy, history, and computer languages. A substantial proportion of respondents reported having formed a close relationship with
someone they had met originally on the Internet; in addition, more than 50% of
these participants had moved an Internet relationship to the “real-life” or face-toface realm. Many of these on-line relationships had become quite close—22% of
respondents reported that they had either married, become engaged to, or were living with someone they initially met on the Internet. In addition, a two-year follow up
of these respondents showed that these close relationships were just as stable over
time as were traditional relationships (e.g., Attridge et al. 1995, Hill et al. 1976).
Follow-up laboratory experiments by McKenna et al. (2002) and Bargh et al.
(2002) focused on the underlying reasons for the formation of close relationships
on the Internet. In these studies, pairs of previously unacquainted male and female
college students met each other for the first time either in an Internet chat room or
face-to-face. Those who met first on the Internet liked each other more than those
who met first face-to-face—even when, unbeknownst to the participants, it was the
same partner both times (McKenna et al. 2002). Moreover, the studies revealed that
(a) people were better able to express their “true” selves (those self-aspects they
felt were important but which they were usually unable to present in public) to their
partner over the Internet than when face-to-face, and (b) when Internet partners
liked each other, they tended (more than did the face-to-face group) to project
qualities of their ideal friends onto each other (Bargh et al. 2002). The authors
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argued that both of these phenomena contribute to close relationship formation
over the Internet. For example, related research on long-distance relationships
(Rohlfing 1995, Stafford & Reske 1990) finds that tendencies to idealize one’s
often-absent partner causes long-distance couples to report higher relationship
satisfaction compared with geographically close relationships (see also Murray
et al. 1996).
The relative anonymity of the Internet can also contribute to close relationship
formation through reducing the risks inherent in self-disclosure. Because selfdisclosure contributes to a sense of intimacy, making self-disclosure easier should
facilitate relationship formation. In this regard Internet communication resembles
the “strangers on a train” phenomenon described by Rubin (1975; also Derlega
& Chaikin 1977). As Kang (2000, p. 1161) noted, “Cyberspace makes talking
with strangers easier. The fundamental point of many cyber-realms, such as chat
rooms, is to make new acquaintances. By contrast, in most urban settings, few
environments encourage us to walk up to strangers and start chatting. In many
cities, doing so would amount to a physical threat.”
Overall, then, the evidence suggests that rather than being an isolating, personally and socially maladaptive activity, communicating with others over the Internet
not only helps to maintain close ties with one’s family and friends, but also, if the
individual is so inclined, facilitates the formation of close and meaningful new
relationships within a relatively safe environment.
Group Membership and Social Support
One of the novel aspects of the Internet for social life is the wide variety of special
interest newsgroups available; there are tens of thousands of newsgroups devoted
to everything from Indian cooking to dinosaurs to raincoat fetishes. There are also
e-mail “listservs” in which group members can post messages to all other members, and of course websites specializing in about every topic imaginable. These
virtual groups can be fertile territory for the formation of friendships and even
close relationships because of the shared interests and values of the members (see
McKenna et al. 2002)—perceptions of similarity and shared beliefs (in addition to
the shared strong topical interests) are known to contribute to attraction between
individuals (Byrne 1971). And especially for important aspects of one’s identity
for which there is no equivalent off-line group, membership and participation in a
relevant virtual group can become a central (and very real) part of one’s social life.
Two main types of virtual group membership that fit this bill have been studied thus
far: those devoted to stigmatized social identities, and those chartered explicitly to
provide social support for debilitating or life-threatening illnesses.
McKenna & Bargh (1998) reasoned that people with
stigmatized social identities (see Frable 1993, Jones et al. 1984), such as homosexuality or fringe political beliefs, should be motivated to join and participate in
Internet groups devoted to that identity, because of the relative anonymity and thus
STIGMATIZED IDENTITIES
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safety of Internet (compared to face-to-face) participation and the scarcity of such
groups in “real life.” Moreover, because it is their only venue in which to share
and discuss this aspect of their identity, membership in the group should be quite
important to these people, and so the norms of such groups should exert a stronger
than usual influence over members’ behavior. This prediction was confirmed by an
archival and observational study of the frequency with which stigmatized-group
members posted messages to (i.e., participated in) the group: Unlike in other Internet groups, participation increased when there was positive feedback from the
other group members and decreased following negative feedback (McKenna &
Bargh 1998, Study 1).
Moreover, according to Deaux’s (1993) model of social identity, members of
stigmatized-identity Internet groups should, because of the importance of that identity to them, incorporate their virtual-group membership into their self-concepts.
If so, we would expect members of these groups to want to make this new and
important aspect of identity a social reality (Gollwitzer 1986) by sharing it with significant others. Structural modeling analyses of survey responses were consistent
with these predictions, across two replications focusing on quite different types
of stigmatized social identities, thereby demonstrating the self-transformational
power of participation in Internet groups. The average respondent was in his or
her mid 30s, so that many respondents, directly because of their Internet group
participation, had “come out” to their family and friends about this stigmatized
aspect of themselves for the first time in their lives.
Such results support the view that membership and participation in Internet
groups can have powerful effects on one’s self and identity. Note here also that,
as Spears et al. (2002) have argued, group processes and effects unfold over the
Internet in much the same way as they do in traditional venues. Predictions about
on-line group behavior and its consequences were generated from theories (social
identity theory, self-completion theory) that were developed based on research on
off-line, face-to-face groups.
In harmony with these conclusions, Davison et al. (2000) studied the provision and seeking of social support on-line by those with grave illnesses,
and found that people used Internet support groups particularly for embarrassing,
stigmatized illnesses such as AIDS and prostate cancer (and also, understandably,
for those illnesses that limit mobility such as multiple sclerosis). The authors point
out that because of the anxiety and uncertainty they are feeling, patients are highly
motivated by social comparison needs to seek out others with the same illness
(p. 213), but prefer to do this on-line when the illness is an embarrassing, disfiguring, or otherwise stigmatized one, because of the anonymity afforded by Internet
groups (p. 215).
This is not to say that on-line social support groups are only helpful for stigmatized illnesses, only that they are especially valuable to those sufferers. McKay
et al. (2002), for example, found that diabetes self-management and peer support
over the Internet led to just as much improvement in physiologic, behavioral, and
ON-LINE SUPPORT
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mental health—especially in dietary control—as did conventional diabetes management. And Wright (2000) showed that among older adults using SeniorNet
and other on-line support websites for the elderly, greater participation in the online community was correlated with lower perceived life stress. Just as with the
need to express important aspects of one’s identity, then, people will be especially
likely to turn to Internet groups when embarrassment or lack of mobility makes
participation in traditional group settings problematic.
IMPLICATIONS FOR RACISM AND PREJUDICE Certainly, being a member of a minority or ethnic social group constitutes a stigma in many social situations (e.g.,
Crocker & Major 1989). Racial, gender, or age-related features are easily identifiable (e.g., Brewer 1988) and therefore not easily concealable within traditional
venues. However, they are much more concealable over the Internet. Accordingly,
Kang (2000) has argued that one potential social benefit of the Internet is to disrupt
the reflexive operation of racial stereotypes, as racial anonymity is much easier to
maintain on-line than off-line. For example, studies have found that African Americans and Hispanics pay more than do white consumers for the same car, but these
price differences disappear if the car is instead purchased on-line (Scott Morton
et al. 2003). However, the continuing racial divide on the Internet (DiMaggio et al.
2001, Hoffman & Novak 1998), in terms of the lower proportion of minority versus
majority group members who have on-line access, can only attenuate the impact
of any such positive, race-blind interpersonal effects on society.
Yet racism itself is socially stigmatized—especially when it comes to extreme
forms such as advocacy of white supremacy and racial violence (see McKenna &
Bargh 1998, Study 3). Thus the cloak of relative anonymity afforded by the Internet
can also be used as a cover for racial hate groups, especially for those members
who are concerned about public disapproval of their beliefs; hence today there are
more than 3000 websites containing racial hatred, agendas for violence, and even
bomb-making instructions (Lee & Leets 2002). Glaser et al. (2002) infiltrated such
a group and provide telling examples of the support and encouragement given by
group members to each other to act on their hatreds. All things considered, then,
we don’t know yet whether the overall effect of the Internet will be a positive or a
negative one where racial and ethnic divisions are concerned.
Community Involvement
As noted above, Nie & Erbring (2000) argued that the Internet was creating a
“lonely crowd” in cyberspace, because Internet use “necessarily” takes time away
from family and friends. However, the evidence very consistently points in the
opposite direction concerning the effect of Internet use on off-line community
involvement. A random national survey by Katz et al. (2001) showed that the more
time Internet users spent on-line, the more likely they were to belong to off-line
religious, leisure, and community organizations, compared to nonusers (p. 412).
Use of the Internet also was not associated with different levels of awareness of
and knowledge about one’s neighbors (p. 414).
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In the Gross et al. (2002) study of California teenagers (described above),
even the regular Internet users in their sample continued to spend most of their
after-school time on traditional activities, many of which involved peer interaction
(participating in clubs or sports, hanging out with friends). A 1998 survey of
nearly 40,000 visitors to the National Geographic website similarly found that
heavy Internet use was associated with greater levels of participation in voluntary
organizations and politics (Wellman et al 2001, p. 436). Finally, Kavanaugh &
Patterson (2001) concluded from the Blacksburg (Virginia) Electronic Village
study “the longer people are on the Internet, the more likely they are to use the
Internet to engage in social-capital-building activities” (p. 507). Thus, contrary to
some well-publicized claims, Internet use does not appear to weaken the fabric of
neighborhoods and communities.
THE MODERATING ROLE OF TRUST
In important ways, using the Internet involves a leap of faith. We type in our credit
card numbers and other personal information in order to make purchases over
the Internet and trust that this information will not be used in unauthorized or
fraudulent ways. We write frank and confidential messages to our close colleagues
and friends and trust that they won’t circulate these messages to others. We trust
anonymous fellow chat room and newsgroup members with our private thoughts
and dreams, and because of the intimacy such self-disclosure creates, come to trust
them enough to give them our phone numbers.
Or we don’t.
Just as in close relationships (Wieselquist et al. 1999), whether we are motivated
to trust or not to trust our interaction partners or website operators is an important moderator of how we respond to the “limited bandwidth” and relative lack of
information over the Internet, compared to traditional social interaction and business transaction settings. As we have seen, negotiators over the Internet react to
the lack of information and cues they have regarding their opponents by assuming
the worst, and so interpret ambiguous data such as delays in e-mail responses as
evidence of sinister motives (Thompson & Nadler 2002). Yet after initial liking is
established while meeting a new acquaintance over the Internet, people tend next
to idealize that person—that is, assuming the best about them (McKenna et al.
2002). The difference between the two situations is not the Internet, because its
characteristics as a communication channel are the same in both cases; the difference is in the social contexts and the different interpersonal motivations and goals
that are associated with the two contexts.
Trust turns out even to moderate differences in the rate of Internet adoption
across countries. Keser et al. (2002) correlated data on Internet adoption rates
(proportion of homes with Internet access) with answers to a question on the
World Values Survey: “Can people generally be trusted, or is it that you can’t
be too careful in dealing with people?” The degree of trust within a country,
indexed by the percentage of respondents who gave the former instead of the
latter answer to the values question, explained nearly two-thirds of the national
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differences in Internet adoption rate, and this relation holds after other possibly
relevant variables, such as number of computers in the country, are statistically
controlled.
This is why “spam”—unsolicited junk e-mail with usually fake return addresses
and often fraudulent claims—is a real threat to the social life of the Internet: It
threatens to undermine that important sense of trust for many people (Gleick 2003).
Today, spam constitutes nearly half of all e-mail traffic, turning the most common
activity on the Internet into an annoyance and chore as users must sort through
and delete the unwanted mail from their inboxes (Economist 2003c). Fortunately,
government and corporations appear finally to be recognizing the problem and
taking action to reduce and regulate junk e-mail (Hansell 2003). Here again, the
Internet appears to be following in the footsteps of its technological predecessors,
which also saw their utility threatened early on by unregulated, self-interested use.
For example, amateur radio enthusiasts filled the public airwaves with chatter in
the early twentieth century, thus making them unlistenable for the home audience,
before governments finally stepped in to regulate the new medium (Spar 2001).
The spam problem and its attempted resolution illustrates that it is not a matter of
whether governments will attempt to regulate and police the Internet, but of how
and how much they will do so.
CONCLUSIONS
People are not passively affected by technology, but actively shape its use and influence (Fischer 1992, Hughes & Hans 2001). The 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.
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. At the same time, however, these “limited bandwidth”
features of Internet communication also tend to leave a lot unsaid and unspecified,
and open to inference and interpretation. Not surprisingly, then, one’s own desires
and goals regarding the people with whom one interacts has been found to make
a dramatic difference in the assumptions and attributions one makes within that
informational void.
Despite past media headlines to the contrary, the Internet does not make its users
depressed or lonely, and it does not seem to be a threat to community life—quite
the opposite, in fact. If anything, the 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. The Internet can be fertile territory for
the formation of new relationships as well, especially those based on shared values
and interests as opposed to attractiveness and physical appearance as is the norm
in the off-line world (see Hatfield & Sprecher 1986). And in any event, when these
Internet-formed relationships get close enough (i.e., when sufficient trust has been
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established), people tend to bring them into their “real world”—that is, the traditional face-to-face and telephone interaction sphere. This means nearly all of the
typical person’s close friends will be in touch with them in “real life”—on the phone
or in person—and not so much over the Internet, which gives the lie to the media
stereotype of the Internet as drawing people away from their “real-life” friends.
Still, the advent of the Internet is likely to produce dramatic changes in our daily
lives. For example, together with high-speed computing and encryption technology it already plays a significant role in crime and terrorism by enabling private
communication across any distance without being detected (Ballard et al. 2002,
p. 1010). And we quite rightly have been warned that repressive regimes may harness the Internet and all of the data banks that connect to it to increase their power
over the population (Manasian 2003, p. 23; Shapiro 1999). A step in this direction
is the 2001 “Patriot Act,” (enacted in the United States following the September 11
attacks) which called for the technology to monitor the content of Internet traffic
to be built into the Internet’s very infrastructure. However, these important issues
concerning the Internet lie outside of our purview in this chapter.
We emphasize, in closing, one potentially great benefit of the Internet for socialpsychological research and theorizing: by providing a contrasting alternative to the
usual face-to-face interaction environment. As Lea & Spears (1995) and O’Sullivan
(1996) have noted, studying how relationships form and are maintained on the Internet brings into focus the implicit assumptions and biases of our traditional
(face-to-face) relationship and communication research literatures (see Cathcart
& Gumpert 1983)—most especially the assumptions that face-to-face interactions,
physical proximity, and nonverbal communication are necessary and essential to
the processes of relating to each other effectively. By providing an alternative interaction setting in which interactions and relationships play by somewhat different
rules, and have somewhat different outcomes, the Internet sheds light on those aspects of face-to-face interaction that we may have missed all along. Tyler (2002),
for example, reacting to the research findings on Internet interaction, wonders
whether it is the presence of physical features that makes face-to-face interaction
what it is, or is it instead the immediacy of responses (compared to e-mail)? That’s
a question we never knew to ask before.
Our review has revealed many cases and situations in which social interaction
over the Internet is preferred and leads to better outcomes than in traditional
interaction venues, as well as those in which it doesn’t. As the Internet becomes
ever more a part of our daily lives, the trick for us will be to know the difference.
But it is reassuring that the evidence thus far shows people to be adapting pretty
well to the brave new wired (and soon to be wireless) social world.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Preparation of this chapter was supported in part by Grant MH60747 from the
National Institute of Mental Health and by the Center for Advanced Study in the
Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, CA. We thank Russell Spears, Tom Postmes, and
Susan Fiske for their comments and suggestions on an earlier draft.
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The Annual Review of Psychology is online at http://psych.annualreviews.org
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