Internet Use Patterns Among Korean Baby Boomers: Factors Influencing Gender Differences
Jeehoon Kim, Ji Hyun Lee, Hee Lee, Young Ji Yoon, Dongwook Kim

TL;DR
This study explores how Korean Baby Boomers use the Internet and finds gender differences in their online behaviors and social interactions.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct Internet use patterns and gender-specific factors influencing them among Korean Baby Boomers.
Findings
Three Internet use patterns were identified: rare users, moderate users, and maximizers.
Men were more likely to be moderate users or maximizers than women.
Maximizers, especially men, were more likely to feel lonely compared to rare users.
Abstract
Korean Baby Boomers (born between 1955 and 1963) are entering older adulthood with unprecedented educational and economic resources, enabling them to navigate the digital landscape more proficiently than previous generations. However, little is known about the patterns of Internet use and the gender-specific factors influencing their use. Using the 2012 Korean Baby Boomers Panel Study data, latent class analysis was conducted with eleven online activities. Multinomial logistic regression analysis was performed (reference: rare users) separately by gender. Predictors included health, social network size, social relationships, activity participation, loneliness, attitudes toward Internet use, and demographic variables. The participants (n = 3,227, Age M(SD)=52.8(2.6), 54% female) responded. Three use patterns were identified: rare users (46.5%), moderate users (43.9%), and maximizers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnology Use by Older Adults · Impact of Technology on Adolescents · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility
