Nevertheless, It Persists

IF 1.7 4区 心理学 Q2 COMMUNICATION
German Neubaum, D. Lane
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract: Social media have become important environments for people to express and explore their political views. Yet, relatively little is known about how affordances provided by social media platforms affect whether and how users express political opinions. This work argues that message persistence (i.e., the temporal extent to which messages can be accessed by users) is a central affordance of many social media, which affects not only users’ likelihood of political expression, but also so-called self-effects in terms of users feeling socially committed to their expressed views. In a pre-registered experiment ( N = 994), we varied the level of message persistence in a social media platform and used behavioral measures of opinion expression. Contrary to expectations, high-persistence social media provoked more opinion expressions than low-persistence social media. Only minimal evidence was found of self-effects and the persistence of the social media environment did not influence self-related outcomes. Results are discussed in light of political expression literature and the role of self-effects in social media.
然而,它仍然存在
摘要:社交媒体已经成为人们表达和探索政治观点的重要环境。然而,人们对社交媒体平台提供的可供性如何影响用户是否以及如何表达政治观点知之甚少。这项工作认为,信息持久性(即用户可以访问信息的时间范围)是许多社交媒体的一个核心启示,它不仅影响用户政治表达的可能性,还影响所谓的自我效应,即用户对自己表达的观点感到社会承诺。在一项预先注册的实验中(N=994),我们改变了社交媒体平台中的信息持久性水平,并使用了意见表达的行为测量。与预期相反,高持久性的社交媒体比低持久性的社会媒体引发了更多的意见表达。只有很少的证据表明存在自我影响,社交媒体环境的持续性不会影响自我相关的结果。结果是根据政治表达文学和自我效应在社交媒体中的作用进行讨论的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
11.80%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: Journal of Media Psychology (JMP) is committed to publishing original, high-quality papers which cover the broad range of media psychological research. This peer-reviewed journal focuses on how human beings select, use, and experience various media as well as how media (use) can affect their cognitions, emotions, and behaviors. Submissions must substantially advance the current state-of the art on a theoretical and/or an empirical level. To name just a few typical fields and domains of inquiry, the Journal of Media Psychology considers manuscripts dealing with research on entertainment, computer-mediated communication (including social media), human-computer interaction, e-learning, computer and video games, virtual environments, or advertising. The journal is also open to research from neighboring disciplines as far as this work ties in with psychological concepts of the uses and effects of the media. Submissions of comparative work, e.g., crossmedia, cross-gender, or cross-cultural, are encouraged. Moreover, submissions including alternative analysis procedures such as the Bayesian approach are welcome. Starting in 2015, the pre-registration of research plans will also be possible. To ensure short turn-around cycles for manuscript review and fast publication, the Journal of Media Psychology relies heavily upon electronic communication and information exchange, starting from electronic submission and continuing throughout the entire review and production process.
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