Gubernskaya Zoya, Treas Judith
Assistant Professor of Sociology, University at Albany, SUNY, Department of Sociology, 351 Arts & Sciences Bldg., 1400 Washington Ave, Albany, NY, 12222.
Chancellor's Professor of Sociology, University of California, Irvine, Department of Sociology, 3151 Social Science Plaza, Irvine, CA 92697.
J Marriage Fam. 2016 Oct;78(5):1237-1249. doi: 10.1111/jomf.12342. Epub 2016 Sep 2.
This paper explores how the diffusion of mobile phones is associated with communication between adult children and their mothers. The paper analyzes 2001 International Social Survey Program (ISSP) data from 24 countries (N = 12,313) combined with the country-level data on the prevalence of mobile phones. Net of individual-level predictors and country wealth, adult children who resided in countries with high prevalence of mobile phones contacted their mothers more frequently. High prevalence of mobile phones was also associated with larger differences in maternal contact by gender and smaller differences by education. These findings suggest that any impact of new communication technology on intergenerational relations is complex. Although mobile phones point to higher levels of at-a-distance contact with mothers and narrower socio-economic disparities related to access and affordability of communication technology, they are also linked to wider contact disparities following gendered cultural expectations.
本文探讨手机的普及如何与成年子女及其母亲之间的沟通相关联。该论文分析了来自24个国家(N = 12313)的2001年国际社会调查项目(ISSP)数据,并结合了各国手机普及率的国家级数据。在排除个体层面的预测因素和国家财富因素后,居住在手机普及率高的国家的成年子女与母亲联系更为频繁。手机的高普及率还与按性别划分的与母亲联系的较大差异以及按教育程度划分的较小差异相关。这些发现表明,新通信技术对代际关系的任何影响都是复杂的。尽管手机表明与母亲的远程联系水平更高,且与通信技术的获取和可承受性相关的社会经济差距更小,但它们也与遵循性别文化期望的更大的联系差距有关。