|
The Rural-Urban Gap in Community Newspaper Editors' Use of Information Technologies Douglas Blanks Hindman Department of Communication North Dakota State University P.O. Box 5075 Fargo, ND 58105-5075 [log in to unmask] (701) 231-7300 Stan Ernst Department of Agriculture Communication North Dakota State University Mavis Richardson Department of Communication North Dakota State University Paper submitted for presentation at the August, 1998, meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Baltimore, MD. Running head: The Rural-Urban Gap The Rural-Urban Gap in Community Newspaper Editors' Use of Information Technologies Abstract This paper is an exploration of community newspaper editors' use of two types of information technologies that are a) compatible with, and b) incompatible with the routine production of the newspaper. Findings were that indicators of social status were closely associated with editor's use of incompatible technologies. Nationally, gaps between rural and urban communities with on-line newspapers appear to be widening. The Rural-Urban Gap in Community Newspaper Editors' Use of Information Technologies Information technologies are often discussed in terms of their potential to either widen or narrow gaps in knowledge and power between higher and lower status segments of society (Ettema, 1984; Katzman, 1974; Rogers, 1986; Scherer, 1989). Similarly, information technologies are often discussed in terms of the potential to either exacerbate or eliminate geographic inequities between urban and distant rural communities (Gillespie & Robins, 1989; Hudson & Parker, 1990). The existence of inequities in the availability and use of information technologies is particularly important in a society in which knowledge is increasingly tied to profits and power (Bell, 1976; Tichenor, Donohue, & Olien, 1970). This is an exploratory study of the social context in which editors use different types of information technologies. Of primary interest is the use of information technologies by editors of newspapers in homogenous rural communities, and by editors in more pluralistic, urban communities. Editor's use of two main types of technologies were also explored: technologies used in the routine production of the newspaper, and technology used to transform the newspaper into an on-line version. The two types of technology explored in this study correspond with what Rogers (1983) defined as compatible and incompatible innovations. Compatibility is defined as the degree to which an innovation is perceived as consistent with the values, experiences, and needs of adopters (p. 223). Information technology use by journalists Recent studies of the use of information technologies by journalists show widespread adoption and increasing levels of use. In a September, 1997, mail survey of magazine and newspaper editors and broadcast news managers, 93% of respondents said they or their staffs use on-line services at least occasionally. Almost half the respondents say they or their staff go on-line every day, and 55% of respondents say their publication, or portions of it, are on-line (Ross & Middleberg, 1997). Niekamp (1997) showed that television web sites with links within news stories tended to receive greater use than other types of interactive content. Redmond (1996) examined 1500 television and radio web sites showed that radio and TV stations were providing very limited community service information on their web sites beyond self-promotion. In contrast, Grubman and Greer (1997) showed that the 89% of the sample of newspaper web pages included local news, but only 15.7% of the newspapers adopted their writing style to fit the medium by including linked boxes or non-traditional storytelling. In one of the few studies that examine the social context of technology use, Grubman and Greer (1997) found that larger newspapers' on-line products had more extensive content than those of smaller newspapers. Larger newspapers' on-line products had news available on the first screen, included national news, provided links to news wires, updated news more frequently, used more non-traditional news writing styles, used multimedia in news stories, provided e-mail addresses, offered on-line discussion forums, allowed searching of classified advertising, and had more comprehensive news archives. The present study is an exploration of the social context of community editor use of different types of information technologies. Specifically, editor use of information technologies would be expected to be related to the social characteristics of the community, the newspaper, and the editor. Information technologies and rural communities Compared to urban communities, residents of rural communities are disadvantaged in both economic terms, and in terms of access to information1. Economic disadvantages include lower income levels, greater economic specialization making the community subject to boom-bust cycles, lower levels of educational attainment, and lower levels of spending on education (Hudson & Parker, 1990; U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment, 1991). Rural residents have less access to diverse sources of information relevant to local concerns than urban residents. In a study of community-related differences in exposure to information about cardiovascular disease, it was shown that residents of suburbs had greater exposure to a diversity of sources than residents of regional or small cities (Finnegan, Viswanath, Kahn, & Hannan, 1993). Nationally, metropolitan daily newspapers no longer provide home delivery in most rural communities, further diminishing the availability of locally-relevant information (Donohue, Tichenor, and Olien 1986). Rural communities are also disadvantaged in terms of development of information technology infrastructure. The lack of communication infrastructure is the result of the greater return on investment associated with placing information technologies in urban areas (Dillman, Beck, & Allen, 1989, pp. 24-25). However, communities that build the necessary infrastructure to make information technologies more widely available in the community often experience mixed results. Widespread development of information technologies in rural communities may also allow metropolitan businesses to gain better access to rural markets. New technologies do not simply reduce spatial inequalities; they also allow highly centralized, transnational corporations access to the local market (Gillespie & Robins, 1989). Similarly, Camacho, Weinstock, and O'Gorman (1997) argued that simply providing access to under served communities does not necessarily lead to widespread use, particularly when the information available does not appear to be relevant to low income, and minority groups. Information technologies are similar to a long list of innovations in transportation and communication that both de-centralize and re-centralize communities, but that ultimately result in rural communities being absorbed into metropolitan dominance (Carey, 1989). Ultimately, the community implications of adoption of information technologies are clear only for those communities that don't adopt: those that don't adopt may be left behind (Wolford & Hollifield, 1997). Information technologies in the social context Rural and urban areas are expected to show different patterns of use of information technologies. Other social contexts would also be expected to be relevant. Universally available technologies such as mass media have been shown to contribute to widening gaps in knowledge among citizens with different levels of socioeconomic status (Tichenor, Donohue, and Olien, 1970; McLeod and Perse, 1994; Viswanath and Finnegan, 1996). Information technologies are also expected to contribute to widening gaps between society's information rich and information poor (Katzman, 1974). Gaps are expected to develop because information technologies are often designed for higher status groups, and because the high cost of early adoption favors groups with more resources (Ettema, 1984; Abbott, 1989). As an innovation such as personal computers becomes more widely diffused in the social system, the gap between early and late adopters can be expected to close (Ettema, 1984). Personal computers have declined in cost in recent years. In 1998, personal computers are expected to sell for $600, further deepening the penetration of the innovation among U.S. households. Eventually, 60% of U.S. households are expected to have personal computers. In a December, 1997, survey for Business Week, 41% of respondents said they used computers at home (Hammonds, 1998). Early adopters of all types of innovations are typically younger, wealthier, and more educated than later adopters (Rogers, 1983). The same characteristics are associated with early adoption of information technologies. Reese, Shoemaker, & Danielson (1986) showed that older respondents held more negative and pessimistic views about information technologies. Abbott (1989) showed that the diffusion of teletext/videotext systems followed a typical pattern with early adopters having higher incomes and being younger than nonadopters. Scherer (1989) showed that early adopters of videocassette recorders were younger and more educated. Further, higher status groups tended to use the videocassette recorders to strengthen their control over the information environment. Information poor groups tended to use VCR's as entertainment substitutes for TV news, news magazines, and nonfiction books (Scherer, 1989, p. 101-102). Lin (1996) showed that income was associated with whether an individual was an owner of a personal computer, and non-adopters (non owners) of personal computers had lower incomes than adopters. A group of studies has questioned the value of social categories such as socioeconomic status in explaining use of information technologies. Ettema (1984) showed that adopters of an agricultural teletext system were younger, more educated and had higher incomes, but the best predictors of use of the technology were innovativeness and the ability to see the importance of the information offered by the system (p. 394). Similarly, Jeffres and Atkin (1996) expected that demographics would play a less significant role in predicting use of electronic mail and a 500 channel cable system. Instead, the authors argued that attitudes play an important role in determining use of the interactive technologies which characterize the new media environment (Jeffres and Atkin, 1996, p. 328). Another study showing that social factors did not explain use of information technologies analyzed rural and nonrural respondent use of 18 information technologies including personal computers, telephone credit cards, and toll free 800 numbers. The strongest predictors were number of telecommunications terminals in the home, percent of time spent on information tasks on the job, and attitudes towards computers (LaRose & Mettler, 1989). One way of addressing the mixed findings regarding the relationships among indicators of social resources and use of information technologies is to observe use of different types of technologies by the respondents. Some technologies are expected to be adopted on the basis of perceived usefulness. Other types of information technologies provide less certain benefits to respondents. Traditional characteristics of early adopters might be more associated with what Rogers (1983) described as incompatible innovations. Findings which show that demographics don't explain adoption and use of information technologies may be based on compatible innovations, defined by Rogers as innovations that are perceived as consistent with the existing values, past experiences and needs of potential adopters (Rogers, 1983, p. 223). Research questions To further understand the relationships among technology type and social categories, each of the research questions will be explored using a wide range of information technologies, including technologies that might be perceived as compatible, and technologies that might be incompatible with the routines of news production. Previous studies have shown that individuals with higher educations are more likely to be early adopters and heavy users of information technologies (Ettema, 1984; LaRose and Mettler, 1989) and are more likely to have optimistic attitudes toward information technologies (Reese, Shoemaker, & Danielson, 1986). Following Tichenor, Donohue, and Olien (1970) education will be used as an indicator of editor's socioeconomic status. RQ1. Will the editors' educational levels will be positively associated with use of both compatible and incompatible information technologies? Editors are also constrained by the size and complexity of the newspaper and its parent organization. Editors from smaller, locally-owned newspapers tend to be more concerned with maintaining the economic viability of the organization (Olien, Tichenor, & Donohue, 1988). Similarly, larger, corporate-owned newspapers would be more likely to take the economic risks associated with early adoption of information technologies, particularly if those technologies are required by the parent organization. Smaller organizations would be less likely to risk adopting technologies that are incompatible with the newspaper's need to maintain economic viability. Demers (1996) argues that newspapers with corporate forms of organization are more profitable because of greater economies of scale, but the employees of corporate newspapers are less occupied with concerns about their organization's profits. Editors in newspapers with corporate forms of organization have greater autonomy, greater role specialization, more separation from ownership, and greater commitment to professional values; editors with in-state ownership tend to place greater emphasis on advertising (Demers, 1996; Donohue, Olien, & Tichenor, 1989). The second research question identifies organizational complexity as a factor that would be expected to affect use of information technologies. Organizational complexity is based on what Demers (1996) defined as "corporate forms of organization." A newspaper is more organizationally complex if it is larger and is owned by a large-scale corporation with out of state headquarters. RQ2. Will the newspapers' level of organizational complexity will be positively associated with the editors' use of both compatible and incompatible information technologies? This research question suggests that organizational size and complexity continue to provide advantages which are related to the use of information technologies. Larger organizations are in a better position to absorb losses resulting from early adoption of technologies that are not successful, and are in a better position to realize windfall profits from technologies that are successful (Rogers, 1983). The final constraint confronting editors is the community itself. Social structure constrains or enables individuals and organizations in systematic ways that result in observable patterns of social behavior. Media organizations in one structural environment perform differently than organizations in another structural environment. Community structural pluralism is defined as the "degree of differentiation in the social system along institutional and specialized interest group lines, in a way that determines the potential sources of organized social power" (Tichenor, Donohue, and Olien, 1980, p. 16). This indicator goes beyond population-based definitions of "rural" and "urban" under the assumption that population alone does not fully describe a community. Communities with small populations can be quite diverse, as in the case of small communities that are dominated by a major university. Community structural pluralism is expected to affect editor use of information technologies because of the limitations posed by the lack of telecommunications infrastructure in smaller communities, and because the type of information available through information technologies may not seem to be relevant to community residents (Dillman, Beck, & Allen, 1989). RQ3. Will editors from small, homogenous, rural communities be less likely to use both compatible and incompatible information technologies than editors from more pluralistic communities ? If gaps are occurring between groups with different levels of resources, then the differences would be expected to become greater over time. In the original formulation of the knowledge gap hypothesis, Tichenor, Donohue, and Olien (1970) argued that "... segments of the population with higher socioeconomic status tend to acquire this information at a faster rate than the lower status segments, so that the gap in knowledge between these segments tends to increase rather than decrease..." Applying this hypothesis to the current study, the gap between newspapers in more and less pluralistic communities would be expected to widen over time, particularly in regard to incompatible technologies. RQ4. Will newspapers from more pluralistic communities adopt information technologies at a faster rate than newspapers from less pluralistic communities? Methods Two main data sets were used for this analysis: a statewide data set and a national data set. The statewide data set was used for research questions 1, 2, and 3, and the national data set was used for research question 4. The statewide data set represents data from a mail survey of a sample of newspaper editors from 74 communities in a Midwestern state. The communities represented a wide range of structural characteristics within a relatively rural, agriculturally oriented, and ethnically homogenous state, and does not constitute a random sample. The survey was conducted between June 4 and August 4, 1997, and the response rate was 89%. The survey was conducted in cooperation with the state newspaper association, and included a number of items related to the editor's adoption and use of information technologies, including: computers used in laying out the pages of the newspaper, use of database software programs, use of electronic news sources, use of on-line services, type of computer connection used, use of e-mail, and whether the newspaper has a presence on the world wide web. The national data set used for this analysis was newspapers from a sample of 461 U.S. counties. Twenty-four states were chosen first to represent the four main sections of the country. Within each state, a systematic sample of counties was drawn. The home county of the major metropolitan newspaper was added if it had not already been chosen with the above method. A list of all daily and all weekly newspapers in the county was prepared and used for research questions regarding the relationship between community structural pluralism and use of information technology. Independent variables: Statewide data set The main independent variables used in exploring the research questions involving the statewide data set were editor's education level, the newspaper's organizational complexity, and the community's structural pluralism. Educational level was determined by asking editors "What is your highest level of education" and providing seven categories between "high school graduate" and "doctorate, professional degree, or equivalent". Additional questions about editor's individual characteristics were measured, but were not included in this analysis. The additional items included editor age, gender, years in the newspaper business, and primary duties at the newspaper. Newspaper organizational complexity was indicated by a summated index comprising standardized measures of the editor's report of the newspaper's circulation, the sum of the number of other media the editor said was held by the owners of the newspaper (including other in-state newspapers, other out-of state newspapers, in-state radio stations, etc.) and a three level measure of ownership type. Ownership type was determined by asking editors: "Which of the below best describes your newspaper's ownership? independently owned, not part of a newspaper group, part of newspaper group with headquarters in state, or part of newspaper group with headquarters out of state (Donohue, Olien & Tichenor, 1989). The reliability of the organizational complexity index was .68. Community structural pluralism in the statewide data set included standardized measures of city population, county population, percent of the county work force not involved in agricultural, forestry or fisheries occupations, and number of county residents with a bachelor's degree. All data were from the 1990 U.S. Census. Multiple measures are used to indicate the level of community structural pluralism. Community and county population, when combined with average per-capita income, are measures which can indicate the potential of the region to support a greater degree of division of labor and more complex organizations, which can be expected to lead to an increase in formalization of social interaction. The work force measure is an indicator of the degree to which the community has diversified the local economy beyond a basic dependence on agriculture. The education measure, when combined with the other measures, is expected to indicate the potential for development of social power among diverse groups within the community. The reliability of the index was .89. Dependent variables: Statewide data set The dependent variables for research questions one through three were use of information technologies. Two main types of technology were explored: technologies used in the routine production of the newspaper, and a measure of whether or not the newspaper had a presence on the World Wide Web. In Rogers (1983) terms, production technologies can be conceptualized as being compatible with the values, experiences and needs of editors, and producing an on-line version of the newspaper can be conceptualized as being less compatible with the editor's daily routines. Producing an on-line version of the newspaper requires the editor perform additional tasks beyond the daily routine such as preparing HTML versions of the text and graphics and updating the content more frequently. Technologies used in the routine production of the newspaper paper were indicated by an index was computed which included the sum of standardized measures of: number of electronic sources of news received by the newspaper use of on-line services by the newspaper type of computer connection used by the newspaper use of e-mail by individuals within the newspaper The reliability of the index was: .79. Editor's use of other technologies associated with routine production of the news were measured, but were not included in the index because of the widespread adoption of the technology. These technologies included computers used in putting the newspaper together and word processing software. An indicator of the editor's use of an incompatible technology was determined by coding the editor's response to the question, "does your newspaper have a home page on the world wide web?" Positive responses were coded as 1, and negative responses coded as zero. Table 1 shows the distribution of the dependent variables within the statewide data set. Table 1. Use of various information technologies by editors in statewide data set (N:74). Indicators of information technology use percent percent of newspapers receiving at least one source of electronic news 71.6 percent of newspapers with a modem or other type of computer connection 62.2 percent of newspapers using at least one on-line service 36.5 percent of newspapers with individuals using e-mail 33.8 percent of newspapers with a presence on the world wide web 24.3 Table 1 shows that all of the technologies that are conceptualized as being compatible with the routine production of the newspaper were more widely used by editors than the indicator of whether or not the newspaper has a presence on the world wide web. Technologies such as electronic sources of news, on-line services, modems and e-mail may provide obvious cost savings for editors looking for ways to more economically acquire information. However, an on-line version of the newspaper may provide less certain benefits, while requiring a new set of skills and routines. Independent variables: National data set The national data set was used in testing the research question about gaps between communities. The independent variables were county structural pluralism and time. County structural pluralism was computed as the sum of standardized values of county population and county seat population. Chronbach's alpha was .76. The index was used to divide the sample into two groups representing counties with lower and higher levels of structural pluralism. In the national data set, the structural pluralism index did not include indicators of county employment or indicators of county educational levels because the measures reduced the index reliability. Because a dichotomous transformation of the index was used, the omission of the two indicators would be expected to have minimal impact on the way communities were grouped. The other independent variable used in testing research question four was time. Two observations of the dependent variable, described below, were made. The first observation was in March, 1996, and the second was March, 1998. The limitation of this measure it can only show linear relationships, whereas there is some indication that knowledge gaps and diffusion curves are not linear phenomena (Moore, 1987; Rogers, 1986). Dependent variables: National data set The main dependent variable for the national data set was whether or not the county had at least one daily or weekly newspaper with a presence on the world wide web. A listing of daily and non-daily newspapers with web sites was searched in March of 1996 and again in March of 1998 (American Journalism Review, 1998). Daily and non-daily newspapers listed as providing full service that were within one of the 461 sample counties were included. The obvious limitation of this methodology is that not all on-line publications are listed on American Journalism Review's Newslink web site. However, in order to make the 1986 and 1988 lists comparable, only newspapers appearing on the Newslink site were included in the study. Results This study sought to explore the use of different types of technologies by editors with different social characteristics. The first three research questions were tested by correlating the independent variables with indicators of both types of information technology. Correlations of technology use with editor education (RQ1); the newspaper's organizational complexity index (RQ2); and the community structural pluralism index (RQ3) are shown in Table 2. Although all of the correlations were in the expected direction, community structural pluralism was the only independent variable that was significantly associated with both measures of use of information technologies. Table 2. Pearson's correlations of use of two types of information technologies, editor education level, newspaper organizational complexity, and community structural pluralism. compatible technology (information technology index) incompatible technology (newspaper web presence) editor's education level .16 .25* organizational complexity .17 .56*** structural pluralism .20* .53*** * p < .05, one tail *** p < .001 Table 2 shows support for the idea that the structural pluralism of the community is positively associated with use of both types of information technologies. Thus, the editors of smaller, rural, less pluralistic communities use fewer information technologies such as electronic sources of news, on-line services, modems or other computer connections, e-mail, and are less likely to have an on-line version of the newspaper. The relatively low correlation coefficients for the information technology index indicates that the traditional correlates of early adoption: educational level of the editor, and the size and complexity of the organization; were not significant predictors of use of the technologies which comprise the index. This is perhaps because the index technologies (electronic sources of news, on-line services, modems, and e-mail) are not innovations, but are rather technologies that have been available for quite some time, and that are compatible with existing routines in the production of the newspaper. Editor decisions about using these technologies may be function of factors not measured in this study, such as perceived usefulness of the technology (Ettema, 1984; Jeffres and Atkin, 1996). Whether or not the newspaper produces an on-line version, however, more closely fits the expected patterns. Level of education, size and complexity of the organization, and structural pluralism of the community are all positively associated with the newspaper's likelihood of having a home page on the world wide web. It appears, then, that traditional constraints of educational level and organizational size are less likely to affect newspaper's use of technologies that support the normal functioning of the newspaper. However, the production of a home page on the world wide web may require greater change in the way a local newspaper conducts daily business, and thus the traditional constraints come into play more prominently. The fourth research question was stated as: Will newspapers from more pluralistic communities adopt and use information technologies at a faster rate than newspapers from less pluralistic communities? Table 3 shows the gap is growing between less and more pluralistic counties that contain at least one newspaper with a web presence. Table 3. Counties containing at least one local newspaper with a web presence, by structural pluralism, and by year, in percent. less pluralistic counties more pluralistic counties total 1996 1.3 12.6 6.9 1998 3.5 35.7 19.5 N:231 N:230 N:461 1996 chi-square = 21.1, p < .001 1998 chi-square = 73.9, p < .001 Between 1996 and 1998, an increasing percentage of all counties included newspapers with home pages on the world wide web. The percentage of all counties grew from 6.9 percent in 1996 to 19.5 percent in 1998. Among the less pluralistic counties, the percentage with web newspapers grew from 1.3 percent to 3.5 percent. Among the more pluralistic counties, the percentage grew from 12.6 percent to 35.7 percent. In 1996, the gap between less pluralistic counties and more pluralistic counties was 11.3 percentage points. In 1998, the gap had grown to 32.2 percentage points. Even though nearly all newspapers may eventually adopt the innovation, the early adoption trends seem to follow the classic diffusion patterns, and also seem to indicate the presence of a gap between more and less pluralistic counties. Summary and discussion The community in which the newspaper is located persists as a barrier to the newspaper's ability to adopt and use information technologies. Two main types of information technology were examined: a) technologies compatible with the newspaper routines, and b), a technology that is not compatible with the daily functioning of newspapers -- particularly newspapers that are concerned with profitability and economic survival. Editor use of technologies that were compatible with existing functions of the newspaper, such as pagination and acquisition of information from news wires, were not highly correlated with traditional predictors of early adoption. However, whether or not the newspaper had an on-line version was highly correlated with all the measures of social resources included in this study: editor's education, the newspaper's organizational complexity, and the community's structural pluralism. Producing an on-line version of the newspaper may provide less obvious benefits to the editor, and may be less compatible with the normal operation of a community newspaper, particularly among smaller newspapers in small, rural, homogenous communities. As a result, the gap between rural and urban communities that contain a newspaper with an on-line version appears to be widening. In many communities, the local newspaper is as old as the community itself. Local newspapers have survived decades of community change. However, it is increasingly difficult for newspapers to survive in communities with declining populations, increasingly specialized economic bases, and dwindling retail businesses. The adoption and use of information technologies may be another way in which newspapers in rural communities can continue to operate in the face of declining local resources. For example, as residents leave the community, many might like to use an on-line version of the hometown paper to keep in touch with the community. However, if the current trend continues, newspapers in small, rural communities will miss out on what might become a significant source of revenue when, and if, on-line versions of local newspapers become profitable. The unique aspects of digital forms of communication, while promising to blur the differences among all forms of communication, appear to be less likely to remove the more fundamental constraints facing local mass media in small rural communities. Notes 1. Rural is defined here as those counties with fewer than 50,000 people living in towns and cities (Parker, Hudson, Dillman, & Roscoe, 1989). References Abbott, E.A. (1989). The electronic farmers' marketplace: New technologies and agricultural information. Journal of Communication, 39, 124-136. American Journalism Review (1998). Newslink. [On-line]. Available: http://www.newslink.org/. Bell, Daniel (1976). The coming of post-industrial society. New York: Basic books. Camacho, M., Weinstock, D., & O'Gorman, K. (1997) A Multimethod Aesthetic Approach to User-Derived Internet Interface Designs. Paper presented at the annual meeting of AEJMC, Chicago, IL. Hammonds, L.C. (1998). BW/Harris poll: Americans are getting hooked on the home PC. In Business Week [On-line]. Available: http:// www. businessweek.com/ 1998/12/b3570067.htm. Carey, James W. (1989). Space, time and communications: A tribute to Harold Innis. In James W. Carey (Ed.) Communication as culture: Essays on Media and society (pp. 142 -172). Boston: Unwin Hyman. Demers, D.P. (1996). The menace of the corporate newspaper: Fact or fiction? Ames: Iowa State University Press. Dillman, D.A., Beck, D.M., & Allen, J. C. (1989). Rural barriers to job creation remain, even in today's Information Age. Rural development Perspectives, 5 (2) 21-27. Donohue, G.A., Olien, C.N., & Tichenor, P. J. (1989). Structure and constraints on community newspaper gatekeepers. Journalism Quarterly, 66, 807-813. Ettema, J.S. (1984). Three phases in the creation of information inequities: An empirical assessment of a prototype videotext system. Journal of broadcasting, 28, 383-395. Finnegan, J.R., Viswanath, K., Kahn, E., & Hannan, P. (1993). Exposure to sources of heart disease prevention information: Community type and social group differences. Journalism Quarterly, 70, 569- 584. Gillespie, A., & Robins, K. (1989). Geographic inequalities: The spatial bias of the new communications technologies. Journal of communication, 39, 7-18. Grubman, J., & Greer, J. (1997). An analysis of on-line sites produced by U.S. newspapers: Are the critics right? Paper presented at the annual meeting of AEJMC, Chicago, IL. Hudson, H., & Parker, E.B. (1990). Information gaps in rural America. Telecommunications Policy, 14 (3), 193-205. Jeffres, L. and Atkin, D. (1996). Predicting use of technologies for communication and consumer needs. Journal of broadcasting and electronic media, 40, 318-330. Katzman, N. (1974). The impact of communication technology: Promises and prospects. Journal of communication, 24, (Autumn) 47-58. LaRose, R. & Mettler, J. (1989). Who uses information technologies in rural America? Journal of Communication, 39 (3), 48-60. Lin, C. (1996, August). Personal computer adoption and Internet use. Paper presented at the annual meeting of AEJMC, Anaheim, CA. McLeod, D.M., & Perse, E.M. (1994). Direct and indirect effects of socioeconomic status on public affairs knowledge. Journalism Quarterly, 71, 433-442. Moore, David W. (1987). Political campaigns and the knowledge-gap hypothesis. Public Opinion Quarterly, 51, 186-200. Niekamp, R. (1997, August). Television Station Web Sites: Interactivity in News Stories. Paper presented at the annual meeting of AEJMC, Chicago, IL. Olien, C. N., Donohue, G. A., & Tichenor, P. J. (1988). Relation between corporate ownership and editor attitudes toward business. Journalism Quarterly, 65, 259-266. Parker, E.B., Hudson, H.E., Dillman, D.A., & Roscoe, A. (1989). Rural America in the Information Age: Telecommunications Policy for Rural Development. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, p. 43. Redmond, J. (1996, August). Broadcasting World Wide Web Sites: Public Service or Self Service? Paper presented at the annual meeting of AEJMC, Anaheim, CA Reese, S.D., Shoemaker, P.J., & Danielson, W.A. (1986). Social correlates of public attitudes toward new communication technologies. Journalism Quarterly 63(4) Winter pp. 675-682, 692. Rogers, E. M. (1986). Communication technology: The new media in society. New York: The Free Press. Rogers, E. M. (1983). Diffusion of innovations. New York: The Free Press. Ross, S. and Middleberg, D. (1998). 1997 Media in Cyberspace Study. Available: [On-line] http://www.mediasource.com/intro.htm. Scherer, C.W. (1989). The videocassette recorder and information inequity. Journal of communication, 39(3), 94-109. Tichenor, P.J., Donohue, G.A., & Olien, C.N. (1970). Mass media and the differential growth in knowledge. Public Opinion Quarterly, 34, 158-70. Viswanath, K., and Finnegan Jr., John R. (1996). The Knowledge Gap Hypothesis: Twenty-Five Years Later. Communication yearbook, 19, 187 - 227. U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, (1991, April). Rural America at the Crossroads: Networking for the Future. OTA-TCT-471. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
|