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Domestication of Smartphones and Mobile Applications: A Quantitative Mixed-Method Study

Mark de Reuver, Shahrokh Nikou, Harry Bouwman, Domestication of Smartphones and Mobile Applications: A Quantitative Mixed-Method Study. Mobile Media & Communication 4(3), 347–370, 2016.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2050157916649989

Abstract:

Smartphones are finding their way into our daily lives. This paper examines the domestication of smartphones by looking at how the way we use mobile applications affects our everyday routines. Data is collected through an innovative quantitative mixed-method approach, combining log data from smartphones and survey (perception) data. We find that there are dimensions of domestication that explain how the use of smartphones affects our daily routines. Contributions are stronger for downloaded applications than for native applications. Especially applications that require interaction with others, such as social media and instant messaging, have a serious impact on our day-to-day routines. As a result, appropriation is core in incorporating smartphones in daily life routines. However, frequency of use and the total number of minutes spent on a given type of application per day affect our everyday routines in different ways. This paper is the first quantitative domestication study that focuses on smartphones rather than feature phones. The theoretical contribution and practical implications are outlined.

BibTeX entry:

@ARTICLE{aconv27564,
  title = {Domestication of Smartphones and Mobile Applications: A Quantitative Mixed-Method Study},
  author = {Reuver, Mark de and Nikou, Shahrokh and Bouwman, Harry},
  journal = {Mobile Media & Communication},
  volume = {4},
  number = {3},
  publisher = {SAGE},
  pages = {347–370},
  year = {2016},
  ISSN = {2050-1587},
}

Belongs to TUCS Research Unit(s): Institute for Advanced Management Systems Research (IAMSR)

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