A longitudinal study of user perceptions of information quality of Chinese users of the internet Online publication date: Tue, 21-Mar-2017
by Barbara D. Klein; Yi Maggie Guo; Chunyue Zhou
International Journal of Information Quality (IJIQ), Vol. 4, No. 2, 2016
Abstract: More than a half billion people use the internet in China, and the environment in which these users work, study, and play using the internet is a rapidly changing one. User perceptions of the quality of information accessed through the internet and through more traditional sources of information may shift over time as the underlying social, cultural, and political environment changes. This study reports the results of a longitudinal survey study of perceptions of information quality of young adults using the internet in China. Results suggest that perceptions of the information quality of internet-based information have shifted more from 2007 to 2012 than perceptions of traditional text sources of information. Implications of the findings for researchers, educators, and information providers are discussed.
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