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- Title
Keeping a diary in cyberspace.
- Authors
Kawaura, Yasuyuki; Kawakami, Yoshiro; Yamashita, Iyomi
- Abstract
This research was conducted into people who post their diaries on the Internet (hereinafter referred to as Web diaries) to reveal the psychological implications of writing a diary in cyberspace. A total of 1,529 people were extracted from full-text search engines and collections of Web diary links and surveyed. Invitations to participate were sent to the authors of the extracted home pages by e-mail and the survey itself was conducted with the use of a home page form. There were 377 valid responses, giving a response rate of 24.7%. The Web diaries were broken down into four types: (a) self-conscious records of fact (memoirs); (b) records of fact conscious of a relationship with the reader (journals); (c) self-conscious expressions of sentiment ("(narrowly defined) diaries"); (d) expressions of sentiments conscious of a relationship with the reader ("open diaries"). The four types were described bidimensionally as (a) a record of fact or an expression of sentiment, and (b) the authors' consciousness is either self-oriented or reader-oriented. Moreover, these dimensions are closely intertwined with utility and self-consciousness.
- Subjects
CYBERSPACE; JOURNAL writing; PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
Japanese Psychological Research, 1998, Vol 40, Issue 4, p234
- ISSN
0021-5368
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1468-5884.00097