Does Age Make a Difference in the Behaviour of Online Social Network Users

Date

2012-02-02

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

IEEE

Type

Conference

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

The online interactions and behaviours of older and younger users have not yet been fully explored. The aim of this study is to present an analysis of the behavioural differences of younger (15-30) and older (50+) users in the use of the online social network site facebook.com. As part of an investigation the full user "Wall" data was extracted from two user groups within Face book in order to answer two research questions (a) Are friend numbers in online social networks related to age? And (b) Does the use of features differ with age? Results of an interaction analysis study show that a clear correlation exists between a user's age and the number of friends they retain. Results show that in respect of feature selection behavioural differences are evident in the use of available user functions, such as the posting of comments and media usage. Our findings show that as users of different ages interact in online social networks, friend numbers vary considerably with younger users having 11 times more friends than older users. Also, we found that the behavior of older users can be identified as being different in usage when compared to younger users.

Description

Keywords

Interactions, Interaction Analysis, Social Networking

Citation

Quinn, D., Chen, L., Mulvenna, M. (2012) Does Age Make a Difference in the Behaviour of Online Social Network Users? In: Proc. of the 4th IEEE International Conference on Cyber, Physical, and Social Computing, Dalian, October 2011, IEEE, pp.266-272.

Rights

Research Institute