Effects of Ethnic Identification on Web Browsers’ Attitudes toward and Navigational Patterns on Race-Targeted Sites
資料來源
doi: 10.1177/0093650203261515
Communication Research June 2004 vol. 31 no. 3 312-337
摘要Abstract
                     Contrary to research that suggests Blacks can 
only be reached effectively with Black-oriented media, this research 
demonstrates
                        that there appears to be a subset of the Black 
population that can be reached equally well with White targeted media as
 they
                        can with Black-targeted media. The study 
findings confirm expectations that Blacks’ differential responses to 
race-targeted
                        Web sites are mediated by their level of ethnic 
identification. Blacks with strong ethnic identities spent more time 
browsing
                        a site and viewing each story when the site was 
targeted to Blacks than Whites. Blacks with strong ethnic identities 
also
                        rated the site and the stories more favorably 
when browsing the Black-targeted site compared to the White-targeted 
site. In
                        contrast, Blacks with weak ethnic identities 
displayed no difference in their browsing time on the sites and stories 
or their
                        rating of the sites and stories based on the 
racial target of the Internet site.
關鍵字 
                     
                  
 


 
0 意見:
張貼留言