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davidjennings's Archive on Apr 29, 2008

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Nancy baym, friends, social networks, last.fm

Digital culture

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Abstract of a research paper by Nancy Baym about what friend relationships on Last.fm actually signify. She (and her co-author) conclude, "Last.fm – and likely other social network sites – serves as just one node in stronger relationships. By itself, Last.fm does not seem to lead to strong relationships. As a relationship-formation site, it fosters weak ties. However, in conjunction with other modes of communication, it may enhance already strong partnerships."

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We found that on average, the relationships were of moderately low strength, just below the midpoint on the scale. Last.fm friendships were likely to be stronger when (1) the partner was female, (2) the relationship was between partners of different sexes, (3) the partners did not meet through Last.fm, (4) the partners also communicated face-to-face, on the telephone, through text messaging, via email, via IM, or on another website, and (5) the partners communicated via Last.fm. Homophily, even in musical taste, did not correspond to friendship strength except in the case of sex, where it lessened relational strength. Chat and postal mail did not correlate with relational strength.

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First Saved by davidjennings on Apr 29, 2008

Description
Abstract of a research paper by Nancy Baym about what friend relationships on Last.fm actually signify. She (and her co-author) conclude, "Last.fm – and likely other social network sites – serves a
davidjennings on Apr 29, 2008
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Online Fandom » How good a friend is a Last....

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