Screenertia: Understanding “Stickiness” of Media Through Temporal Changes in Screen Use

Author:

Brinberg Miriam1ORCID,Ram Nilam2,Wang Jinping3,Sundar S. Shyam1,Cummings James J.4,Yeykelis Leo5,Reeves Byron2

Affiliation:

1. The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

2. Stanford University, CA, USA

3. The Chinese University of Hong Kong

4. Boston University, MA, USA

5. Toyota Research Institute - Advanced Development, Palo Alto, CA, USA

Abstract

Descriptions of moment-by-moment changes in attention contribute critical elements to theory and practice about how people process media. We introduce a new concept called screenertia and use new screen-capture methodology to empirically evaluate its occurrence. We unobtrusively obtained 400,000+ screenshots of 30 participants’ laptop screens every 5 seconds for 4 days to examine individuals’ attention to their screens and how the distribution of attention differs across media content. All individuals’ screen segments were best described by a log-normal survival function—evidence of screenertia. Consistent with the literature on uses and gratifications of media, news/entertainment activities were the most “sticky.” These findings indicate that screenertia is not only related to the level of interactivity of media content but is also related to its modality and agency. Discussion of the findings highlights the importance of theorizing, examining, and modeling the specific time scales at which media behaviors manifest and evolve.

Funder

social science research institute, pennsylvania state university

national institutes of health

stanford university

Stanford University Maternal and Child Health Research Institute

The Cyber Social Initiative, The Stanford University PHIND Center

U.S. National Library of Medicine

knights templar eye foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Communication

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