|
ESZTER HARGITTAI'S RESEARCH
|
|
Cognitive Ability and Internet Use Among Older Adults
[pdf] [click for full article]
by Jeremy Freese, Salvador Rivas and Eszter Hargittai
2006. Poetics. 34(4):236-249. August-October.
Abstract
While previous work has found cognitive ability to be strongly associated with whether older adults use the
Internet, we consider whether cognitive ability also differentiates basic aspects of use. Four measures of use
are considered: having high-speed access, length of time since initial household adoption, self-reported time
using the Internet, and whether any of the respondents. Internet use involves the Web in addition to email. In
all cases, we find associations with cognitive ability, although effects are sometimes mediated to
nonsignificance by subsequent attainments, especially education. Given how central social support is to
discussions of older adults navigating the Internet, we look also at reports of the availability of such
support, and we find that cognition is positively related to respondents having someone available to help them
with Internet problems. Taken together, our results suggest strongly that the already cognitively advantaged
are much better positioned to reap the potential benefits of online tools to help older adults navigate social
benefits and make complicated decisions.
Outline
I. Introduction
II. Cognition and explaining differential Internet use
III. Data
IV. Results
V. Conclusion
Acknowledgements
We thank Paul DiMaggio, Keith Roe, and Robert Hauser for helpful comments. This work was
supported by funding from the National Institute of Aging (to Freese and Rivas) and aWisconsin
Longitudinal Survey Pilot Grant (to Hargittai).
You may not post this document on any Web sites or distribute it on
any mailing lists. You can point people to its online location here:
http://www.eszter.com/research/a19-cognitiveability.html.