Work, friendship, and media use for information exchange in a networked organization
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
The quality of online social relationships
Communications of the ACM - How the virtual inspires the real
Hanging out in the Virtual Pub: Masculinities and Relationships Online
Hanging out in the Virtual Pub: Masculinities and Relationships Online
Virtually Criminal
Computers in Human Behavior
Why shy people use instant messaging: Loneliness and other motives
Computers in Human Behavior
The impact of the Internet on the social lives of users: A representative sample from 13 countries
Computers in Human Behavior
Computers in Human Behavior
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Today many young people form and maintain what they consider friendships through the net. Internet friendship appears to some as modifying the meaning of real friendship and replacing it with something more trivial. In this paper we explore the complexity of online friendship. We start by seeking to gain an understanding of why and how friendship relates to wellbeing. We then look at how friendships are formed, focusing on the concepts of propinquity and homophily and how they play out within the context of online friendships. We delineate the major dimensions of friendship that have emerged in theory and research and then comment on how these features of friendship may be affected by the advent of widespread electronic communication. The differences between offline and online companionship, social support, tangible support and protection, exclusiveness, conflict resolution and relationship stability are also considered. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the challenges of conducting research on the behaviour of children and young people on the Internet and the difficulties in defining the term ''friendship.''