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- Title
Comparative Loneliness of Users Versus Nonusers of Online Chatting.
- Authors
Chorng-Shyong Ong; Shu-Chen Chang; Chih-Chien Wang
- Abstract
Online chatting is an important component of improving interpersonal relationships online, but it may reduce participants' communication time with family members. We conducted a study of the relationship between participants' intent to engage in online chatting and three dimensions of loneliness: social, familial, and romantic. This study was designed to show the effect of online chatting on each of these three dimensions of loneliness. The participants in the study were 709 students at two universities in Taiwan who were classified on the basis of whether or not they had ever engaged in online chatting. Of the participants, 651 (91.82%) fully completed the questionnaires that served as the study instruments and were included in data analysis. The study found that individuals who had participated in online chatting exhibited greater familial loneliness than those who had not because the time spent in online chatting reduced the time spent in familial relationships. Social loneliness was related to the quality of Internet relationships rather than to the time spent online. Individuals who participated in online chatting had less romantic loneliness because of a greater ease of maintaining romantic relationships online. We conclude that online chatting can reduce social loneliness through high-quality Internet relationships but may exacerbate familial loneliness.
- Subjects
TAIWAN; LONELINESS; ONLINE chat; INTERPERSONAL relations; QUESTIONNAIRES; INTERNET; COMPUTER network resources
- Publication
CyberPsychology, Behavior & Social Networking, 2011, Vol 14, Issue 1/2, p35
- ISSN
2152-2715
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1089/cyber.2009.0321