This paper explores what spending time means from a user perspective. Drawing from three qualitative audience studies that center around the notion of experience, it reveals three complexities regarding time spent in relation to news use. Overall, we find that time spent does not necessarily measure interest in, attention to or engagement with news. First, time spent does not reflect the quality of attention being paid. Second, there is no linear relationship between time spent and interest or engagement. More time spent on news use can be the result of little interest or engagement, and vice versa. Experienced users engage in quick news practices because they are practiced and skillful at using news: they know how to handle and navigate th...
ABSTRACTReading of digital news on personal devices has dramatically increased. Parallel to new devi...
This paper challenges the generally taken-for-granted automatic link between media platforms, media ...
One can learn a lot about society by knowing how people spend their time during the average day. How...
This paper describes a qualitative study of online news reading and browsing. Thirty people particip...
This article seeks to capture material and sensory dimensions of everyday news use that usually rema...
This article uses the notion of habit to explore how news users adopt a new subscription into their ...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate whether individuals who use more everyday technologies...
The production and consumption of online news are usually under a bursty temporal pattern. However, ...
The article contributes both conceptually and methodologically to the study of online news consumpti...
Scholars are beginning to question the impacts of the Internet for the conceptualization of time and...
The term media experience is seldom defined explicitly by communication and media scholars. Most of...
People are spending increasingly more time on social media platforms, with Facebook being the bigges...
Previous research (Blatchley et al., 2007) investigating the relationship between timing accuracy an...
Many accounts of contemporary mediated communication of various kinds emphasise speed, immediacy and...
Reading of digital news on personal devices has dramatically increased. Parallel to new devices, nov...
ABSTRACTReading of digital news on personal devices has dramatically increased. Parallel to new devi...
This paper challenges the generally taken-for-granted automatic link between media platforms, media ...
One can learn a lot about society by knowing how people spend their time during the average day. How...
This paper describes a qualitative study of online news reading and browsing. Thirty people particip...
This article seeks to capture material and sensory dimensions of everyday news use that usually rema...
This article uses the notion of habit to explore how news users adopt a new subscription into their ...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate whether individuals who use more everyday technologies...
The production and consumption of online news are usually under a bursty temporal pattern. However, ...
The article contributes both conceptually and methodologically to the study of online news consumpti...
Scholars are beginning to question the impacts of the Internet for the conceptualization of time and...
The term media experience is seldom defined explicitly by communication and media scholars. Most of...
People are spending increasingly more time on social media platforms, with Facebook being the bigges...
Previous research (Blatchley et al., 2007) investigating the relationship between timing accuracy an...
Many accounts of contemporary mediated communication of various kinds emphasise speed, immediacy and...
Reading of digital news on personal devices has dramatically increased. Parallel to new devices, nov...
ABSTRACTReading of digital news on personal devices has dramatically increased. Parallel to new devi...
This paper challenges the generally taken-for-granted automatic link between media platforms, media ...
One can learn a lot about society by knowing how people spend their time during the average day. How...