Campbell, 2007: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Perceptions and Uses of Mobile Telephony

Topic:

Drawing from the theoretical orientation of apparatgeist, this article explores the cultural similarities and differences in perceptions and uses of mobile telephony. A sample of college students from Hawaii, Japan, Sweden,Taiwan and the US mainland was surveyed to assess: (1) perceptions of the mobile phone as fashion; (2) attitudes about mobile phone use in public settings; (3) use of the mobile phone for safety/security; (4) use of the mobile phone for instrumental purposes; and (5) use of the mobile phone for expressive purposes.The results indicate some differences and several similarities among the cultural groupings and help to lay the groundwork for future research and theory-building.

survey, 231 students

Constructs in this publication:

Construct Cites Category Questions given? Content validity Pretests Response type Notes
Expressive use Campbell, 2003 no no none no
Fashion Campbell, 2003 no no none no
Safety/security Campbell, 2003 no no none no
Public use Campbell, 2003 no no none no
Instrumental use Campbell, 2003 no no none no

Citation:

Scott W. Campbell. A cross-cultural comparison of perceptions and uses of mobile telephony. New Media & Society, 9(2):343–363, April 2007. doi:10.1177/1461444807075016.

Bibtex


@article{campbell_crosscultural_2007,
 author = {Campbell, Scott W.},
 doi = {10.1177/1461444807075016},
 issn = {1461-4448, 1461-7315},
 journal = {New Media \& Society},
 language = {en},
 month = {April},
 number = {2},
 pages = {343-363},
 title = {A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Perceptions and Uses of Mobile Telephony},
 volume = {9},
 year = {2007}
}