The article contributes both conceptually and methodologically to the study of online news consumption by introducing new approaches to measuring user information behaviour and proposing a typology of users based on their click behaviour. Using as a case study two online outlets of large national newspapers, it employs computational approaches to detect patterns in time- and content-based user interactions with news content based on clickstream data. The analysis of interactions detects several distinct timelines of news consumption and scrutinises how users switch between news topics during reading sessions. Using clustering analysis, the article then identifies several types of news readers (e.g. samplers, gourmets) and examines their new...
Most of our knowledge about online news consumption comes from survey-based news market reports, par...
We study the news reading behavior of several hundred thousand users on 65 highly visited news sites...
When following links, online news consumers could recall the name of the news outlet 56% of the time...
The article contributes both conceptually and methodologically to the study of online news consumpti...
This article problematizes the relationship between clicks and audience interests. Clicking patterns...
The complexity and diversity of today’s media landscape provides many challenges for scholars studyi...
How do people consume news online? Here, we propose a novel way to answer this question using the br...
The complexity and diversity of today’s media landscape provides many challenges for scholars studyi...
Understanding people's online behaviour has traditionally been a field of interest of commercial res...
Understanding how citizens keep themselves informed about current affairs is crucial for a functioni...
Understanding how citizens keep themselves informed about current affairs is crucial for a functioni...
Modelling the different factors that lead people to choose news articles is one of the key challenge...
The aim of this study is to survey reading habits of users of an online news portal. The assumption ...
This dissertation investigates how digital intermediaries shape news consumption. In particular, the...
The social brain hypothesis approximates the total number of social relationships we are able to mai...
Most of our knowledge about online news consumption comes from survey-based news market reports, par...
We study the news reading behavior of several hundred thousand users on 65 highly visited news sites...
When following links, online news consumers could recall the name of the news outlet 56% of the time...
The article contributes both conceptually and methodologically to the study of online news consumpti...
This article problematizes the relationship between clicks and audience interests. Clicking patterns...
The complexity and diversity of today’s media landscape provides many challenges for scholars studyi...
How do people consume news online? Here, we propose a novel way to answer this question using the br...
The complexity and diversity of today’s media landscape provides many challenges for scholars studyi...
Understanding people's online behaviour has traditionally been a field of interest of commercial res...
Understanding how citizens keep themselves informed about current affairs is crucial for a functioni...
Understanding how citizens keep themselves informed about current affairs is crucial for a functioni...
Modelling the different factors that lead people to choose news articles is one of the key challenge...
The aim of this study is to survey reading habits of users of an online news portal. The assumption ...
This dissertation investigates how digital intermediaries shape news consumption. In particular, the...
The social brain hypothesis approximates the total number of social relationships we are able to mai...
Most of our knowledge about online news consumption comes from survey-based news market reports, par...
We study the news reading behavior of several hundred thousand users on 65 highly visited news sites...
When following links, online news consumers could recall the name of the news outlet 56% of the time...