Item

Unravelling passive social media use through screenomes

Abstract

The active-passive framework to social media use and well-being promised nuanced insights, yet effects of passive use have been mixed. One reason could be the enormous heterogeneity of the ‘passive use’ concept, which encompasses various social media features, actions, and contents. This study applies the conceptual lenses of the hierarchical CMC taxonomy and social media content genres to unpack and explore this heterogeneity of passive social media use. We use a random sample of smartphone screenshots (‘screenomics’) drawn from 703,827 sequential screenshots collected from 20 participants over a two-week period to content analyze 10,000 screenshots. Results reveal substantial heterogeneity and patterns with in passive use across four analytical levels: branded application, feature, modality, and content topics/genres. As the effects of social media on well-being may often be caused by content or design features, our study provides insights into how passive use can be broken down into more meaningful units of analysis.

Description

Keywords

social media, active-passive model, screenomics, digital well-being, content analysis

Citation

Yee, A. Z. H., Krause, H.-V., Meier, A., Ng, L. Y., & Loy, G. P. (2024). Unravelling passive social media use through screenomes [Preprint]. OSF. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/9uywm_v1

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as open access