4.5 Article

I Just Google It: Folk Theories of Distributed Discovery

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION
Volume 68, Issue 3, Pages 636-657

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/joc/jqy009

Keywords

Audience Research; News Media; Social Media; Search Engines; Journalism; Political Knowledge; Media Literacy

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Funding

  1. Google UK as part of the Digital News Initiative [CTR00220]

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A significant minority of people do not follow news regularly, and a growing number rely on distributed discovery (especially social media and search engines) to stay informed. Here, we analyze folk theories of news consumption. On the basis of an inductive analysis of 43 in-depth interviews with infrequent users of conventional news, we identify three complementary folk theories (news finds me, the information is out there, and I don't know what to believe) that consumers draw on when making sense of their information environment. We show that the notion of folk theories help unpack the different, complementary, sometimes contradictory cultural resources people rely on as they navigate digital media and public affairs, and we argue that studying those who rarely engage directly with news media but do access information via social media and search provides a critical case study of the dynamics of an environment increasingly defined by platforms.

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