A social cognitive theory of Internet uses and
gratifications: toward a new model of media
attendance.
by LaRose, Robert^Eastin, Matthew S.
The addition of the Internet to the electronic media environment
has renewed interest in the question of media attendance: the factors
that explain and predict individual exposure to the media. Much of the
research has been carried out by followers of the uses and
gratifications tradition, who anticipated the medium as an exemplar of
active media selection that could further validate the core tenets of
that paradigm (Morris & Ogan, 1996; Newhagen & Rafaeli, 1996;
Ruggerio, 2000). Instead, Internet research has introduced new
conceptual and operational approaches and new variables that now
challenge some of the basic assumptions, procedures, and findings of
uses and gratifications. However, these findings have yet to be
integrated into a comprehensive model of media attendance. Moreover,
these relationships have been explored among college student samples and
must now be extended to the general online population. The present
research proposes and tests a model of media attendance inspired by
Bandura's (1986) Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) that builds upon the
conventional uses and gratifications approach by clarifying important
explanatory constructs and identifying new ones.
Uses and Gratifications Meet the Internet
Numerous studies (e.g. Charney & Greenberg, 2001; Chou &
Hsiao, 2000; Dimmick, Kline & Stafford, 2000; Eighmey & McCord,
1998; Ferguson & Perse, 2000; Flanagin & Metzger, 2001; Kaye,
1998; Korgaonkar & Wolin, 1999; LaRose, Mastro & Eastin, 2001;
Lin, 1999; Papacharissi & Rubin, 2000; Parker & Plank, 2000;
Perse & Greenberg-Dunn, 1998; Song, LaRose, Eastin & Lin, 2004;
Stafford & Stafford, 2001) have applied uses and gratifications to
the Internet. Collectively, these studies upheld one of the model's
basic propositions (Palmgreen, Wenner & Rosengren, 1985), that
gratifications sought explain individual media exposure. However, many
Internet-related studies have also reconfirmed a basic weakness of uses
and gratifications: They did not explain media exposure very well.
Consistent with uses and gratifications studies of other media (cf.
Palmgreen, Wenner, & Rosengren, 1985), the Internet studies that
hewed most closely to the uses and gratifications tradition have
explained less than 10% of the variance in Internet usage from
gratifications (e.g., Ferguson & Perse, 2000; Kaye, 1998;
Papacharissi & Rubin, 2000; Parker & Plank, 2000).
That the Internet is in many ways a unique medium has not escaped
the attention of researchers. The time-honored list of gratifications
derived from early television studies (notably, Greenberg, 1974; Rubin,
1983) has been expanded to explore unique facets of the Internet medium.
For example, Papacharissi and Rubin (2000) proposed interpersonal
communication gratifications, recognizing that communication functions
like e-mail and chatrooms are common modes of Internet usage. Korgaonkar
and Wolin (1999) found dimensions of information, interactive, and
economic control. Other new gratification dimensions have included:
problem solving, persuading others, relationship maintenance, status
seeking, and personal insight (Flanagin & Metzger, 2001); Song et
al.'s (2004) virtual community gratification; Charney and
Greenberg's (2001) coolness, sights and sounds, career, and peer
identity factors; and Stafford and Stafford's (2001) search and
cognitive factors. Stafford and Stafford (2001) achieved a modest
increase (to 21%) in the variance explained in Internet usage, mostly
from the addition of a search factor (i.e., that accessing search
engines was an important motivation for using the Internet) to more
conventional information seeking and entertainment gratifications.
Others innovated with conceptual and operational definitions,
creating what might be called prospective, or expected, gratifications.
These ask respondents what they expect from the Internet in the future
as opposed to those that they seek in the present or have obtained in
the past. This is a departure from the gratifications
sought/gratifications obtained (GS/GO) formulation that has long guided
uses and gratifications (Palmgreen et al., 1985). Studies that have
employed prospective measures (e.g., Charney & Greenberg, 2001;
LaRose, Mastro, & Eastin, 2001; Lin, 1999) have consistently
doubled, tripled, or quadrupled the amount of variance explained in
Internet attendance behavior compared to conventional approaches.
A Social Cognitive Perspective of Uses and Gratifications
Prospective gratification measures were initially an innovative
means of understanding the medium before it was widely distributed in
the population (e.g., Lin, 1999). However, they are also consistent with
a view of media attendance derived from Bandura's (1986, 1989)
Social Cognitive Theory (SCT), which offers a theoretical explanation
for the often-observed (for example, Papacharissi & Rubin, 2000)
empirical relationship between media gratifications and media usage. SCT
is familiar to media scholars in its earlier incarnation as Social
Learning Theory (Bandura, 1977), as a theory of media effects. However,
SCT is a broad theory of human behavior that may be applied to media
attendance as well. SCT posits reciprocal causation among individuals,
their behavior, and their environment. Within SCT, behavior is an
observable act and the performance of behavior is determined, in large
part, by the expected outcomes of behavior, expectations formed by our
own direct experience or mediated by vicarious reinforcement observed
through others. Thus, media usage is overt media consumption behavior
(usage of the Internet in the present case), and it is determined by the
expected outcomes that follow from consumption. Since expected
gratification outcomes may be formulated from vicarious observation of
others' behavior (Eastin, 2002) they can explain consumption both
among prospective future users of the Internet (as in Lin, 1999) and
current users.
Uses and gratifications can be understood in socio-cognitive terms.
Where uses and gratification researchers have explored gratifications,
SCT proposes expected outcomes and where uses and gratifications
researchers posit needs, SCT proposes behavioral incentives. Expected
positive outcomes of Internet exposure should cause further exposure.
What people have gotten in the past from the Internet is an important
part of the basis for their current expectations about it. However,
expectations are also shaped by vicarious learning, based on
observations of the experiences of others, and also self-efficacy (see
below). However, it is the current expectation about outcomes of
behavior that best determines behavior.
The expected outcomes are organized around six basic types of
incentives for human behavior: novel sensory, social, status, monetary,
enjoyable activity, and self-reactive incentives (Bandura, 1986, pp.
232-240) and these are theoretically constructed rather than
statistical[y derived from exploratory factor analysis as in the uses
and gratifications tradition. An analysis of these categories against
Internet gratifications (LaRose et al., 2001) revealed that conventional
uses and gratifications research underemphasized status and monetary
incentives that had significant positive correlations with Internet
usage (see a]so Charney & Greenberg, 2001; Flanagin & Metzger,
2001; Krgaonkar & Wolin, 1999). When expected outcome measures
reflecting the full range of these incentive categories were subjected
to exploratory factor analysis, a "new" virtual community
dimension was uncovered that drew heavily on the status incentives
lacking in conventional uses and gratifications research (Song et al.,
2004). Despite few differences (notably the inclusion of measures of
habit strength in gratification dimensions), other SCT incentive
categories parallel conventional uses and gratifications dimensions.
Activity incentives, predicated on the desire to take part in enjoyable
activities, correspond to the entertainment gratifications.
Self-evaluative incentives, which involve attempts to regulate dysphoric
moods, parallel "pass time" or "boredom"
gratifications. Novel sensory incentives include the search for novel
information, and they are similar to information seeking gratifications.
Social incentives stemming from rewarding interactions with others
correspond to social gratifications.
However, the gratifications sought-gratifications obtained
formulation (Palmgreen, et al, 1985) does not precisely match the
concept of outcome expectations, or the subjective probability that a
particular outcome will be obtained for future behavior. Gratifications
sought reflect wished-for outcomes (e.g., I hope to find an e-mail from
home) but not necessarily expectations of achieving the outcome through
our present behavior (but the folks e-mailed yesterday, so I don't
expect one today). Comparing gratifications sought with those obtained
reflects the outcomes achieved in the past but not necessarily the
likelihood that they will be repeated in the present by engaging in
further media consumption. Rather, SCT assumes that outcome expectations
are continually updated as a result of self-observation of our own
experience and (vicarious) observation of the behavioral consequences
that occur to others.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Broadcast Education
Association Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.