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[ecrea] Nine-country study of news consumption
Thu Jun 27 08:03:10 GMT 2013
REUTERS INSTITUTE DIGITAL NEWS REPORT 2013 – a nine-country study of
cross-media news consumption in the digital culture
One of the largest comparative studies of online news habits ever
carried out reveals national differences in our online behaviour. This
is the second of the annual Reuters Institute Digital News surveys
published by Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ) at
Oxford University. You Gov online polls commissioned by RISJ were
conducted with 11,000 online users in the UK, US, Denmark, France,
Germany, Spain, Italy, Brazil and Japan.
For instance, the survey shows surprising national differences in the
rate of online participation. The Spanish (27%), Italians (26%), and
Americans (21%) were more than twice as likely to comment on a news
story via a social network as the British (10%). Meanwhile urban
Brazilians were five times more likely to comment on a news site than
the Germans or Japanese surveyed, and nearly half (44%) shared a news
story on a weekly basis via a social network, with around one third
(32%) doing so by email.
Study author Nic Newman, a Research Associate at the Reuters Institute
for the Study of Journalism and digital strategist, said: ‘Our findings
suggest that the culture of a country is the main driver for how we
engage with online news – playing an even greater part than the
technical tools and devices we have to access it. People living in
Brazil, Italy and Spain have much higher levels of interaction, both
with the news sites and with each other, sharing and commenting about
news stories. By contrast, although the Japanese appear to embrace the
non traditional news sites, they have the lowest level of online and
offline participation, followed by Germany, Denmark and the UK.’
The full 108-page report is available online on a dedicated new website
(www.digitalnewsreport.org) containing slidepacks, charts, and raw data
tables, with a licence that encourages reuse. The website is designed so
it can also be used for mobile and tablet devices. A description of the
methodology is available with the complete questionnaire.
This is the second in what the RISJ hope will be an annual series of
reports that tracks the transition of the news industry towards an
increasingly digital and multi-platform future.
Sponsors of this year’s research include Google, BBC, Ofcom, France
Télévisions, and Newsworks, as well as RISJ’s academic partners the Hans
Bredow Institute in Hamburg and Roskilde University, Denmark.
For further information, please contact
Kim Christian Schrøder and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen
Department of Communication, (kimsc /at/ ruc.dk) and (rkleis /at/ ruc.dk)
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