@inproceedings{1b865398398a45e78c6e403d22005f7f,
title = "Social connectedness on Facebook - An explorative study on status message usage",
abstract = "With over 400 million active users Facebook is undeniably a large social phenomenon and one of the largest social networks on the Internet. Together with Facebook a variety of novel communication styles have developed, dramatically influencing social interaction. The underlying paper reports the results of a survey (N=109) analyzing Facebook's micro-blogging function available through users' status updates. Our results suggest that the use of status update messaging generates a feeling of connectedness between users. Furthermore, non-parametric analyses distinguishing between low- and highconnected groups have been performed and experimentally confirmed the existence of distinct user profiles as a function of the variable {"}feeling connected{"}. The analyses revealed that the more individuals use their status message function to actively reveal information about themselves, the more connected they feel. Connectedness seems the result of active information sharing modulated by the amount of information shared rather than by the type of information an individual is sharing.",
keywords = "Connectedness, Facebook, Quantitative study and survey, Social network, Status update messages, Twitter",
author = "Felix K{\"o}bler and Christoph Riedl and C{\'e}line Vetter and Leimeister, {Jan Marco} and Helmut Krcmar",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781617389528",
series = "16th Americas Conference on Information Systems 2010, AMCIS 2010",
pages = "2509--2520",
booktitle = "16th Americas Conference on Information Systems 2010, AMCIS 2010",
note = "16th Americas Conference on Information Systems 2010, AMCIS 2010 ; Conference date: 12-08-2010 Through 15-08-2010",
}