Topic: The impact of streaming service technologies (such as Netflix or Hulu).
Subject Search
Database: Academic Search Premier
Source:
Tefertiller, A. (2017). Moviegoing in the Netflix Age: Gratifications, Planned Behavior, and Theatrical Attendance. Communication & Society, 30(4), 27–44. https://doi-org.ezproxy.fhsu.edu/10.15581/003.30.3.27-44
Subject Term: Digital Technology
Results count: 11,381
Useful or not?
Using the subject search from this article was useful. Looking at the subject terms this article had showed me subjects that may provide research useful to my topic. Looking at the “Digital Technology” subject showed a lot of results, but I can narrow this down a lot and then possibly find relevant sources.
Backward and Forward Citation Trace
Database: Academic Search Premier and Google Scholar
Source:
Tefertiller, A., & Sheehan, K. (2019). TV in the Streaming Age: Motivations, Behaviors, and Satisfaction of Post-Network Television. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 63(4), 595–616. https://doi-org.ezproxy.fhsu.edu/10.1080/08838151.2019.1698233
How many sources cited it? 18 via looking on Google Scholar as I didn’t see any forward tracing on the Academic Search Premier database.
How many sources did it cite? 57
Useful or not?
Both backward and forward tracing has proven to be very useful. Forward tracing of this article via Google Scholar brought to light this potential source:
Weber Pedersen, S., & Juhlin, J. (2021). Factors That Affect Consumer Behavior Towards Streaming and TV Services (Dissertation). Retrieved from http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mdh:diva-54463
Backward tracing showed many sources that could be useful since it had 57 different sources to search through.