Litcius/Paper detail

Crank That Feed: A Physical Intervention for Active Twitter Users

Katherine Song, Janaki Vivrekar, Lynn Yeom, Eric Paulos, Niloufar Salehi

202112 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Passively consuming digital social media content often precludes users from mindfully considering the value they derive from such experiences as they engage in them. We present a system for using Twitter that requires users to continuously turn a hand crank to power their social media screen. We evaluate the device and its effects on how users value Twitter with 3 participants over 3 weeks, with the middle week of Twitter usage directed exclusively through our system. Using our device caused a dramatic decrease in Twitter usage for all participants, which either persisted or rebounded in the post-intervention week. Our analysis of diary studies and qualitative interviews surfaced three themes indicating shifting focus on content, shifting awareness about the role of social media, and new social dynamics around content-sharing.

Topics & Concepts

Social mediaIntervention (counseling)Computer scienceFocus (optics)Internet privacyValue (mathematics)Content (measure theory)Power (physics)Content analysisMultimediaQualitative researchQualitative analysisFocus groupPsychologyWorld Wide WebSociologyOpticsPsychiatryQuantum mechanicsMathematicsMachine learningAnthropologySocial sciencePhysicsMathematical analysisInnovative Human-Technology InteractionImpact of Technology on AdolescentsChild Development and Digital Technology
Crank That Feed: A Physical Intervention for Active Twitter Users | Litcius