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Instant messaging in teen life

Published:16 November 2002Publication History

ABSTRACT

Instant Messaging (IM) is being widely adopted by teenagers. In a study of 16 teenage IM users, we explore IM as an emerging feature of teen life, focusing our questions on its support of interpersonal communication and its role and salience in everyday life. We qualitatively describe the teens' IM use interpersonally, as well as its place in the domestic ecology. We also identify technology adoption conditions and discuss behaviors around privacy management. In this initial investigation, we found differences in the nature of use between high school and college teens, differences we propose are accounted for by teens' degree of autonomy as a function of domestic and scholastic obligations, the development of independent work practices, Internet connectivity access, and even transportation access. Moreover, while teen IM use is in part characterized as an optimizing choice between multiple communications media, practice is also tied to concerns around peer pressure, peer group membership and creating additional opportunities to socialize.

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                  cover image ACM Conferences
                  CSCW '02: Proceedings of the 2002 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
                  November 2002
                  396 pages
                  ISBN:1581135602
                  DOI:10.1145/587078

                  Copyright © 2002 ACM

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                  • Published: 16 November 2002

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                  CSCW '02 Paper Acceptance Rate39of193submissions,20%Overall Acceptance Rate2,235of8,521submissions,26%

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