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      THE ‘COMMUNICATIONS REVOLUTION’ AND THE HOUSEHOLD: SOME THOUGHTS FROM THE JAPANESE EXPERIENCE

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      Prometheus
      Pluto Journals
      communications, technology, diffusion, Japan
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            Abstract

            In recent years there has been much debate on the likely impact of new communications media on the household. In Japan, where progress in the development and application of communications technology has been rapid, a large-scale experiment was conducted between 1984 and 1987 to test public acceptance of these media. This article examines some of the major findings of the experiment. It concludes that household use of the new media in the immediate future is likely to be very limited. In the longer run such use may expand, but a number of important technological and social changes will be necessary before large-scale expansion can occur.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            cpro20
            CPRO
            Prometheus
            Critical Studies in Innovation
            Pluto Journals
            0810-9028
            1470-1030
            December 1988
            : 6
            : 2
            : 237-248
            Affiliations
            Article
            8629313 Prometheus, Vol. 6, No. 2, 1988: pp. 237–248
            10.1080/08109028808629313
            0affeb06-9589-4d0a-b684-a6a17746207b
            Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

            All content is freely available without charge to users or their institutions. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without asking prior permission of the publisher or the author. Articles published in the journal are distributed under a http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

            History
            Page count
            Figures: 0, Tables: 0, References: 33, Pages: 12
            Categories
            Original Articles

            Computer science,Arts,Social & Behavioral Sciences,Law,History,Economics
            communications,technology,Japan,diffusion

            NOTES AND REFERENCES

            1. Compyʉtopia, 256, 1 January 1988, p. 56.

            2. See, for example, Y. Kitahara, Information Network System: Telecommunications in the Twenty-First Century, Heinemann, London, 1983; K. Imai, Jōhō Nettowⱥku Shakai, Iwanami, Tokyo, 1984.

            3. A. Toffler, The Third Wave, William Morrow, New York, 1980, pp. 210–223.

            4. Y. Masuda, The Information Society as Post-Industrial Society, Institute for the Information Society, Tokyo, 1980, p.62.

            5. Toffler, op. cit., pp. 218–19. On the possibilities of spatial decentralisation as a consequence of new telecommunications technology, see also J. Nilles, “Teleworking from home”, in T. Forester (ed.), The Information Technology Revolution, Oxford, Basil Blackwell 1985, pp. 202–08; Peter Hall, “The world and Europe”, in T. Brotchie et al. (eds), The Future of Urban Form, London & Sydney, Croom Helm, 1985, pp. 17–30.

            6. J. Gershuny and I. Miles, The Service Economy: The Transformation of Employment in Industrial Societies, Frances Pinter, London 1983, Ch. 5.; I. Miles and J. Gershuny, “The social economics of information technology”, in M. Ferguson (ed.), New Communications Technologies and the Public Interest, Beverly Hills, Sage Publications 1986, pp. 18–36. A similar point is also made by Toffler, op. cit., pp. 282–305.

            7. I. Reinecke, Connecting You: Bridging the Communications Gap, Ringwood, Victoria, Penguin Australia, 1985, p. 146.

            8. P. Golding and G. Murdock, “Unequal information: access and exclusion in the new communications market place”, in Ferguson, op. cit., pp. 71–83.

            9. See B. Berch, “The resurrection of out-work”, Monthly Review, 37, 6, 1985, pp. 37–46; M.H. Olson and J.B. Primps, “Working at home with computers: work and non-work issues”, Journal of Social Issues, 30, 3, 1984, pp. 99–112; W. L. Renfro, “Second thoughts on moving the office home”, in T. Forester (ed.), op. cit., pp. 209–215; T.D. Halloran, “The social implications of technological innovations in communications”, in M. Traber (ed.), The Myth of the Information Revolution, Beverly Hills and London, Sage Publications, 1986, pp. 46–63; L. Nichol, “Communications technology: economic and spatial impacts”, in M. Castells (ed.), High Technology, Space and Society, Beverly Hills and London, Sage Publications, 1985, pp. 191–209; T. Morris-Suzuki, “Centralisation and decentralisation in Japan's information society”, Media Information Australia, 44, 1987, pp. 48–54.

            10. S. H. Aronson, “Bell's electrical toy: what's the use? The sociology of early telephone usage”, in I. de Sola Pool (ed.), The Social Impact of the Telephone, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1976.

            11. For an assessment of the results of the Hi-OVIS project see K. Ikeda, “‘Hi-OVIS’ seen by users — use and valuation of Japanese interactive CATV”, Studies of Broadcasting, 21, 1985, pp. 95–120.

            12. “I.N.S. Moderu Shisutemu Jikken to Kōiki Riyō Jikken”, NTT unpublished report, September 1987.

            13. Denki Tsʉshin Kōzdoka Kyōkai (ed.), Teretopia Handobukku Shuppan Kaihatsu Sha, Tokyo, 1986; Nyʉ Media Henshʉbu (ed.), Za Teretopia, Shuppan Kaihatsu Sha, Tokyo, 1985.

            14. F. Takakura, “Oowarai ‘Nyu Media Shufu Nikki” Shincho 45, 4, pp. 188–96.

            15. NTT (ed.), Yutaka na Kōdo Jōhō Shakai o Motomete (Bessatsu), NTT, Tokyo, 1987, p. 66.

            16. ibid, p. 67.

            17. Discussion by group of INS monitors April, 1987.

            18. H. Uzawa, Kindai Keizaigaku no Tenkan, Iwanami Shoten, Tokyo, 1986, p. 45.

            19. NTT (ed.) Yutaka na Kōdo Jōhō Shakai o Motomete (Bessatsu), pp. 17–22.

            20. ibid, p. 18.

            21. Nyʉ Media Henshʉbu (ed.), Za Teretopia, p. 207.

            22. NTT (ed.) Yutaka na Kōdo Jōhō Shakai o Motomete (Bessatsu), pp. 207.

            23. Nikkei Sangyō Shimbun (ed.), Kōdo Jōhō Shakai Vol. 1, I. Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Tokyo, 1984, p. 186.

            24. NTT (ed.) Yutaka na Kōdo Jōhō Shakai o Motomete (Bessatsu), pp. 124.

            25. ibid, pp. 121–22.

            26. See Nilles, op. cit.; Berch, op. cit.; Renfro, op. at.; L. A. Singleton, Telecommunications in the Information Age, 2nd edition, Cambridge Mass., Ballinger, 1986, Ch. 19.

            27. D. N. Carson, “The evolution of picturephone service”, in G. Shiers (ed.), The Telephone: An Historical Anthology, Arno Press, New York, 1977, pp. 284–91.

            28. Takakura, op. cit. The videophone appeared to be more readily accepted in institutions such as schools than in households. See NTT (ed.), Yutaka na Kōdo Jōhō Shakai o Motomete, pp. 205–15.

            29. Discussion by group of INS monitors, April, 1987.

            30. See for example A. E. Imamura, Urban Japanese Housewives: At Home and in the Community, University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, 1987.

            31. J. Northcott, M. Fogarty and M. Trevor, Chips and Jobs: Acceptance of New Technology at Work, Policy Studies Institute, London, 1985, p. 106.

            32. Naikaku Sōridaijin Kanbō Kōhōshitsu, Jōhō Shakai ni Kansuru Seron Chōsa, Tokyo, 1986.

            33. Aronson, op. cit., p. 28.

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