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read moreKent State Journalism Professor Investigates Vacationing From Facebook
Posted March 23, 2015 | Meghan CaprezChance York, Ph.D., assistant professor in Kent State University’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication, worked with Jason Turcotte, Ph.D., an assistant professor at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, to discover why Facebook users take voluntary temporary leaves of absence from Facebook.
Their research was recently published in Communication Research Reports, a scholarly journal of communications-based empirical articles.
Initially inspired by a Pew research study stating that 61 percent of all Facebook users reported temporarily discontinuing using Facebook, York wanted to discover why these social media users behaved this way.
“I thought, ‘Why would anyone intentionally abandon an innovation such as Facebook, only to immediately re-adopt it? Why would anyone leave Facebook only to intentionally return to it later?’” York says.
York assumed people were leaving Facebook because they found its content “boring, dramatic, too political or communication on Facebook was lackluster in some way.” For a majority of those who participated in the study, this was not the case.
“The reasons people gave for giving up Facebook for extended periods of time were unexpected,” York says. “The majority of users who reported temporarily leaving Facebook (32.58 percent) said they discontinued using the site because they viewed it as a burden on their time.”
Traditionally, scholars have shown that users discontinue innovations like Facebook when they are dissatisfied with the content or move on to other, better technologies. York and Turcotte's paper suggests existing theory, such as Diffusion of Innovations Theory, does not address temporary “vacationing” from technologies “motivated by a time-based burden on one's cognitive or social resources.”
“Bottom line: Most users temporarily leave Facebook because it's perceived as a time-based, information overload or social burden,” York says. “That's a pretty interesting finding to me because I can't really think of another innovation that is temporarily abandoned because it is eating large amounts of a user's time. Maybe video games, but that's really it.”
York received his doctorate in mass communication from Louisiana State University in 2014. His research interests include political communication and media socialization; social media is only a secondary research interest, but he hopes to further explore it.
“This paper is really the first step in exploring this phenomenon,” York says. “I'd be interested to probe the content-based motivations people provide for why they give up Facebook. I think it's intriguing.”
Read York’s research here.
For more information about Kent State’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication, visit www.kent.edu/jmc.