Shifting Perspectives: How COVID-19 and In-Home Information and Communication Technology Impacted U.S. Residential Internet Perceptions

IF 1 Q3 COMMUNICATION Journal of Information Policy Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.5325/jinfopoli.12.2022.0012
J. Greig, H. Nelson
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Abstract

This study analyzes how the COVID-19 pandemic has altered individual perceptions of Internet service providers (ISPs) and Internet importance, reliability, and status as an essential public utility (EPU). The authors found that lower income, younger, women, and racial-ethnic minority participants had lower ISP and Internet reliability perceptions. The pandemic increased perception of Internet as an EPU by 15% and access to in-home Information and Communication technology was significantly related to perceptions of Internet importance and reliability. Significantly, women perceived higher importance of household Internet than men, specifically for education, employment, and telehealth. Additionally, racial-ethnic minorities relied on Internet for entertainment and education more than white participants. The authors provide recommendations for public utility models of Internet, Internet-reliant technology adoption campaigns, and policy that targets sociodemographic/geographic barriers to Internet access.
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转变视角:COVID-19和家庭信息和通信技术如何影响美国居民对互联网的看法
本研究分析了COVID-19大流行如何改变个人对互联网服务提供商(isp)以及互联网重要性、可靠性和作为基本公用事业(EPU)地位的看法。作者发现,低收入、年轻、女性和少数族裔参与者对ISP和互联网可靠性的看法较低。这次大流行使人们对互联网作为一种EPU的看法增加了15%,而家庭信息和通信技术的获取与人们对互联网重要性和可靠性的看法显著相关。值得注意的是,女性认为家庭互联网比男性更重要,特别是在教育、就业和远程医疗方面。此外,少数族裔比白人更依赖互联网进行娱乐和教育。作者为互联网的公用事业模型、依赖互联网的技术采用运动和针对互联网接入的社会人口/地理障碍的政策提供了建议。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
8 weeks
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