Title
Gender, Internet Identification, and Internet Anxiety: Correlates of Internet Use.
Abstract
This paper reports a study that investigated the effects of gender, Internet anxiety, and Internet identification on use of the Internet. The study involved 608 undergraduate students (490 females and 118 males). We surveyed the students' experience with the Internet, as well as their levels of Internet anxiety and Internet identification. We found a number of gender differences in participants' use of the Internet. Males were proportionally more likely to have their own web page than were females. They used the Internet more than females; in particular, they were more likely to use game websites, to use other specialist websites, and to download material from the Internet. However, females did not use the Internet for communication more than males. There was a significant positive relationship between Internet identification and total use of the Internet, and a significant negative relationship between Internet anxiety and total use of the Internet. Controlling for Internet identification and Internet anxiety, we found a significant and negative correlation between gender and use of the Internet. In total, all three of our predictors accounted for 40% of the variance in general Internet use: with Internet identification accounting for 26%, Internet anxiety accounting for 11%, and gender accounting for 3%.
Year
DOI
Venue
2005
10.1089/cpb.2005.8.371
CYBERPSYCHOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Keywords
Field
DocType
web pages,psychology
Sociology of the Internet,Social psychology,Negative relationship,Web page,Anxiety,Psychology,Download,Multimedia,The Internet
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
8
4
1094-9313
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
31
4.00
12
Authors
10
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Richard Joiner110412.19
Jeff Gavin210715.76
Jill Duffield3485.65
Mark Brosnan4689.64
Charles Crook5387.57
Alan Durndell621517.61
Pam Maras7627.47
Jane Miller8314.00
Adrian J Scott9475.87
Peter Lovatt10314.00