Title
Why We Don'T Click: Interrogating The Relationship Between Viewing And Clicking In Social Media Contexts By Exploring The "Non-Click"
Abstract
Motivated by work that characterizes view-based social media practices as "passive use," contrasting it with more desirable, interactive "active use," this study explores how social media users understand their viewing and clicking practices and the empirical relationship between them. Employing a combination of eye tracking, survey, and interview methods, our study (N= 42) investigates the non-click-instances where people intentionally and thoughtfully do not click on content they spend time viewing. Counterintuitively, we find no difference in viewing duration to clicked versus non-clicked Facebook content. We find that use motivations and Facebook feed content are significant predictors of click behavior but measures of overall use, such as network size or minutes of use per day, are not. Our interview data reveal three audience-related concerns that contribute to deliberate non-clicking and illustrate how non-clicked content contributes to social connectedness when imported into other channels. We discuss implications for researchers, users, and designers.
Year
DOI
Venue
2020
10.1093/jcmc/zmaa013
JOURNAL OF COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION
Keywords
DocType
Volume
Social Network Sites, Facebook, Clicking, Passive Use, Active Use, Viewing, Relationship Maintenance
Journal
25
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
6
1083-6101
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Nicole Ellison16051509.80
Penny Trieu201.01
Sarita Yardi384660.48
Robin Brewer414011.95
Aarti Israni500.34