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Media Mention
Jonnelle Marte, Wall Street Journal | Digits
Nov 13, 2009
Are heavy Internet users living in an isolated virtual bubble, devoid of face-to-face human interaction? Or has the Web made us more connected to people?
A recent study by the Pew Research Center makes a case for the latter, finding that while the...
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Media Mention
Matthew Perrone, Associated Press
Nov 11, 2009
WASHINGTON — As federal regulators take their first tentative steps toward policing the wild west of medical information online, pharmaceutical companies are pressing their case to market drugs via Google, Twitter and other Web sites.
The Food and...
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More in: Health, Social Networking
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Media Mention
Bettina Edelstein, J.D. Biersdorfer and Pedro Rafael Rosado, New York Times
Nov 11, 2009
The New York Times's Tech Talk for November 11, 2009 includes an interview with Keith Hampton, lead author of a new study from the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project on social isolation and technology, discussing the report. You c...
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Media Mention
Greg Toppo, USA Today
Nov 5, 2009
It's easy – and tempting – to believe that cellphones and the Internet are making Americans more isolated as they filter out those around them and focus on lighted screens, distant Facebook friends and LOL conversations.
But a new survey finds tha...
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Media Mention
Belinda Goldsmith, Miral Fahmy (ed.), Reuters News
Nov 5, 2009
Contrary to popular belief, the Internet and mobile phones are not isolating people but enhancing their social worlds, according to a U.S. survey.
The survey was sparked by a 2006 study by U.S. sociologists who argued technology is advancing a tre...
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Media Mention
Jon Gordon, American Public Media | Future Tense
Nov 5, 2009
A new study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project finds that the Internet and mobile phones do not lead to social isolation, as some previous research suggested. In fact, there's plenty of evidence that people who spend a lot of time online h...
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Media Mention
David Glenn, The Chronicle of Higher Education
Nov 5, 2009
Americans tend to have fewer close confidants today than they did two decades ago -- but that isn't because they're all huddled over their computers playing World of Warcraft or reading the Volokh Conspiracy.
A ...
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Media Mention
Stefanie Olsen, New York Times Bits Blog
Nov 5, 2009
Hundreds of daily updates come from friends on Facebook and Twitter, but do people actually feel closer to each other?
It turns out the size of the average American’s social circle is smaller today than 20 years ago, as measured by the number of s...
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Media Mention
Barbara Ortutay, Associated Press
Nov 4, 2009
NEW YORK — A new study confirms what your 130 Facebook friends and scores of Twitter followers may have already told you: The Internet and mobile phones are not linked to social isolation.
Online activities such as e-mail, blogging and frequenting...
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Media Mention
Suzanne Choney, MSNBC
Nov 4, 2009
Americans’ love affairs with mobile phones and the Internet are not contributing factors to an increase in social isolation in the United States, according to a new study from the Pew Internet & American Life Project.
Despite the fact that more an...
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