
Darja Groselj- PostDoc Position at University of Ljubljana
Darja Groselj
- PostDoc Position at University of Ljubljana
About
21
Publications
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Introduction
Darja Grošelj is a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Social Informatics, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. She holds a PhD in Information, Communication, and the Social Sciences from Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, UK. Her research interests focus around the use of digital technologies and social inequalities, with a special interest in how online engagement is shaped by various material and motivational factors.
Current institution
Publications
Publications (21)
The further digitization of society during the COVID-19 pandemic had implications for differential internet access and related social and economic outcomes. The pandemic impacted all three levels of the digital divides, as it affected how people accessed the internet, their internet skills and usage patterns. The literature, however, provides only...
Izvleček Izhodišča: Digitalno opismenjevanje starejših oseb je v luči digitalne preobrazbe, ki poteka na vseh ravneh družbe, izjemnega pomena. Starejše osebe so namreč glede na njihovo raven digitalne vključenosti, zelo heterogena skupina, saj se razlikujejo glede dostopa do interneta in nabora digitalnih veščin. Kljub temu pa je digitalno opismenj...
The COVID-19 pandemic has had profound implications on how older adults engage with the digital world. While there is converging evidence that during the pandemic the number of online newcomers has increased the most among older adults, digital inequalities have become even more condensed among the socially disadvantaged groups in this period. Impo...
Research on digital inequality has found that aging adults are often at risk of digital exclusion. Understanding the validity of survey measures assessing Internet skills in this population is critical to providing the high-quality data needed for effective digital inclusion policy interventions. This cross-validation study examines the structural...
Research suggests that older internet users are not a homogeneous group of users, as their level of digital inclusion varies widely, depending not only on their age, but also on their socio-demographic background, internet access characteristics, and the availability of social resources associated with “age-graded” life events (e.g., retirement and...
Internet nonuse persists among the most excluded groups of people, particularly among aging and low-educated populations. Proxy internet use (PIU), where nonusers ask internet users to do things online for them, helps nonusers mitigate their exclusion from the digital realm. This study examines the changing factors that shape PIU activation. Specif...
Proxy internet use has been identified as a viable strategy for achieving tangible internet outcomes and overcoming digital exclusion. In this study, we distinguish between proxy users who perform online activities for others and users-by-proxy, for whom activities are performed. We present a conceptual extension of the model of compound and sequen...
Internet access is now characterized by multi-device, mobile, and ubiquitous access. We explore the changing nature of internet access by focusing on social practices that shape the position and role of internet technologies in everyday internet use. Drawing on the domestication framework, the study uses data from qualitative interviews with UK int...
This study assessed the construct and criterion validity of the short version of the Internet Skills Scale and examined whether its four dimensions – Operational, Information Navigation, Social, and Creative skills – are influenced by a higher-order dimension of general internet skills as one second-order factor. In 2018, a face-to-face survey comp...
An important contribution of digital inequalities research has been the discussion of nuances in ways that people (dis)engage with information and communication technologies (ICTs). One such practice is proxy Internet use (PIU): indirect Internet access by asking others to do things online for them or on their behalf. Whereas there is a good amount...
Internet non-use is increasingly concentrated in vulnerable groups of people, especially among ageing populations and those with low socio-economic status. As participation in society becomes largely dependent on use of internet-enabled technologies, internet non-users may seek alternative ways of using the internet. Proxy internet use (PIU), where...
Digital inequalities research has documented a set of practices related to people's Internet use that questions the binary division between Internet users and non-users. In particular, among older adults, a considerably large group of individuals has been identified as not using the Internet by themselves; rather, they ask members of their personal...
Research into digital inequalities has shifted from a binary view of Internet use versus non-use to studying gradations in Internet use. However, this research has mostly compared categories of users only. In addition, the role of attitudes in digital inequalities has been largely overlooked. This article addresses these limitations by performing a...
Research on Internet use typically has been concerned with issues of access or activities people do online. This research has been fruitful, but it has not been fully linked to larger theories of stratification. Although Max Weber says little about technology his general approach to studying society suggests concepts other than access and demograph...
Research on Internet use typically has been concerned with issues of access or activities people do online. This research has been fruitful, but it has not been fully linked to larger theories of stratification. Although Max Weber says little about technology, his general approach to studying society suggests concepts other than access and demograp...
This paper addresses limitations of previous digital inequality research through a systematic analysis of factors that distinguish Internet non-users from low users of the Internet, and in turn low users from regular and broad Internet users. In addition to socio-demographic characteristics, we examine the role of attitudes toward technologies and...
This paper addresses limitations of previous digital inequality research through a systematic analysis of factors that distinguish Internet non-users from low users of the Internet, and in turn low users from regular and broad Internet users. In addition to socio-demographic characteristics, we examine the role of attitudes toward technologies and...
We examine the dimensions of Internet use based on a representative sample of the population of the UK, making three important contributions. First, we clarify theoretical dimensions of Internet use that have been conflated in prior work. We argue that the property space of Internet use has three main dimensions: amount of use, variety of different...
Purpose
– This study aims to map the information landscape as it unfolds to users when they search for health topics on general search engines. Website sponsorship, platform type and linking patterns were analysed in order to advance the understanding of the provision of health information online.
Design/methodology/approach
– The landscape was sa...
The evolution of mobile is reshaping the future of communication in the digital age. This report identifies emerging patterns of mobile communication and the factors that are shaping its future, including its societal implications. This analysis is used to speculate on alternative scenarios for the future of mobile communication and key development...