{"title":"Epidemiology of News: Doom Scrolling, Information Overload, and Other “Media Pathologies” in Our Infected Society","authors":"G. Buoncompagni","doi":"10.5296/jsr.v14i1.20808","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Along with the Covid-19 pandemic, a new type of 'disease' has spread just as rapidly, affecting the world of journalism and information. In addition to the concept of 'infodemic', first proposed by David J. Rothkopf in 2003 in relation to SARS, then taken up by a World Economic Forum study in 2006 to explain the fairness of information in emergencies, and finally used by the World Health Organisation itself to refer to the spread of false, tendentious or incorrect information during the Covid-19 pandemic. 2020 was also the year of a new word: doom scrolling.This term refers to when a person constantly reads and searches for negative news online, and the consequences this has on our mental health. It is still a relatively new phenomenon, but several experts have already pointed out that doom scrolling is predictably detrimental to a person's mental well-being.The pandemic has thus confirmed the already known risks of overexposure to a constant flow of information, a problem that affects media professionals, their audiences and institutions, and that can trigger social and psychophysical pathologies such as depression, mood swings, isolation and paranoia.An attempt will be made here to discuss the issue from a critical point of view and to reconstruct the phenomenon of 'doom scrolling'. Finally, an attempt will be made to define the main lines of public discussion based on the most recent literature available in this period of global crisis.","PeriodicalId":239220,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Sociological Research","volume":"108 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Sociological Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5296/jsr.v14i1.20808","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Along with the Covid-19 pandemic, a new type of 'disease' has spread just as rapidly, affecting the world of journalism and information. In addition to the concept of 'infodemic', first proposed by David J. Rothkopf in 2003 in relation to SARS, then taken up by a World Economic Forum study in 2006 to explain the fairness of information in emergencies, and finally used by the World Health Organisation itself to refer to the spread of false, tendentious or incorrect information during the Covid-19 pandemic. 2020 was also the year of a new word: doom scrolling.This term refers to when a person constantly reads and searches for negative news online, and the consequences this has on our mental health. It is still a relatively new phenomenon, but several experts have already pointed out that doom scrolling is predictably detrimental to a person's mental well-being.The pandemic has thus confirmed the already known risks of overexposure to a constant flow of information, a problem that affects media professionals, their audiences and institutions, and that can trigger social and psychophysical pathologies such as depression, mood swings, isolation and paranoia.An attempt will be made here to discuss the issue from a critical point of view and to reconstruct the phenomenon of 'doom scrolling'. Finally, an attempt will be made to define the main lines of public discussion based on the most recent literature available in this period of global crisis.
随着Covid-19大流行,一种新型“疾病”同样迅速蔓延,影响着新闻和信息世界。此外,2003年大卫·j·罗斯科普夫(David J. Rothkopf)首先提出了“信息流行病”(infodemic)的概念,随后在2006年世界经济论坛(World Economic Forum)的一项研究中用于解释紧急情况下信息的公平性,最后被世界卫生组织(World Health organization)自己用于指代新冠疫情期间虚假、有倾斜性或不正确信息的传播。2020年也是一个新词诞生的一年:厄运滚动。这个词指的是一个人不断地在网上阅读和搜索负面新闻,以及这对我们的心理健康造成的后果。这仍然是一个相对较新的现象,但一些专家已经指出,厄运滚动对一个人的精神健康是有害的。因此,大流行证实了已知的过度接触持续信息流的风险,这一问题影响到媒体专业人员及其受众和机构,并可能引发抑郁、情绪波动、孤立和偏执等社会和心理生理病理。这里将尝试从批判的角度来讨论这个问题,并重构“厄运滚动”现象。最后,将尝试根据这一全球危机时期最新的文献来定义公共讨论的主线。