研究虚假信息和信任对社交媒体用户COVID-19疫苗决策的影响

Zulma Valedon Westney, Inkyoung Hur, Ling Wang, Junping Sun
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引用次数: 0

摘要

社交媒体上的虚假信息是一个严重的问题。本研究考察了虚假信息对COVID-19疫苗接种决策的影响,以了解社交媒体用户在社交媒体feed中出现虚假信息时如何做出医疗保健决策。它审查了对帖子所有者的信任,作为信息类型(即虚假信息和事实信息)与疫苗接种决策之间关系的调节者。设计/方法/方法本研究进行基于场景的网络调查实验,从社交媒体用户中收集广泛的调查数据。本研究发现,信息类型对社交媒体用户的COVID-19疫苗接种决策有不同的影响,并且发现对帖子所有者的信任对信息类型与疫苗接种决策之间的关系有调节作用。对于那些对邮政所有者有高度信任的人来说,信息类型对疫苗接种决策的影响很大。相比之下,信息类型对帖子所有者信任度非常低的人的决策没有影响。此外,身分认同与遵从性也会影响对邮政拥有人的信任。原创性/价值本研究通过展示虚假信息对疫苗接种决策的影响,并提供对帖子所有者的信任如何影响信息类型对疫苗接种决策的影响的经验证据,为网络虚假信息和个人医疗保健决策的文献做出贡献。与以往关注信息或社交媒体平台信任的研究不同,这项研究关注的是对帖子所有者的信任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Examining the effects of disinformation and trust on social media users' COVID-19 vaccine decision-making
PurposeDisinformation on social media is a serious issue. This study examines the effects of disinformation on COVID-19 vaccination decision-making to understand how social media users make healthcare decisions when disinformation is presented in their social media feeds. It examines trust in post owners as a moderator on the relationship between information types (i.e. disinformation and factual information) and vaccination decision-making.Design/methodology/approachThis study conducts a scenario-based web survey experiment to collect extensive survey data from social media users.FindingsThis study reveals that information types differently affect social media users' COVID-19 vaccination decision-making and finds a moderating effect of trust in post owners on the relationship between information types and vaccination decision-making. For those who have a high degree of trust in post owners, the effect of information types on vaccination decision-making becomes large. In contrast, information types do not affect the decision-making of those who have a very low degree of trust in post owners. Besides, identification and compliance are found to affect trust in post owners.Originality/valueThis study contributes to the literature on online disinformation and individual healthcare decision-making by demonstrating the effect of disinformation on vaccination decision-making and providing empirical evidence on how trust in post owners impacts the effects of information types on vaccination decision-making. This study focuses on trust in post owners, unlike prior studies that focus on trust in information or social media platforms.
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