新型冠状病毒肺炎期间受众对手机短视频成瘾的心理探索——以中国受众为例

Zhikun Liu, Jong-Yoon Lee, Shanshan Liu
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摘要

近年来,短视频呈现出井喷式的发展,已经成为除了图形和语音之外的互联网“第三语言”。短视频软件使用方便,没有门槛,同时可以根据受众的需求进行精准推送,快速覆盖中国的每一个年龄段。然而,短视频火爆的背后也潜藏着诸多隐患;由于疫情,人们在家无事可做,因此长期沉迷于此;因此,陷入了“娱乐至死”的陷阱。短视频很容易让人们在被疫情压抑的时候产生情感共鸣。人们在刷短视频的过程中可以得到一些情感上的安慰或释放,所以短视频成瘾的现象在疫情期间尤为明显。虽然对短视频的研究越来越多,但在受众层面对短视频成瘾的研究还不够。因此,本文以媒介依赖理论为基础,以网络归属为中介变量,探讨观众观看短视频成瘾的动机对短视频成瘾的影响。观众从观看Jitterbug或TikTok的中国观众中选择,通过在线问卷调查,使用SPSS软件对过滤后的问卷进行定量分析。结果显示,冲动、焦虑、孤独与短视频成瘾显著正相关,与网络归属感显著正相关,与短视频成瘾显著正相关。通过SPSS对筛选的问卷进行定量分析,发现冲动性、焦虑性、孤独感与短视频成瘾呈显著正相关,与网络归属感呈显著正相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Psychological exploration of audience’s addiction to watching mobile short videos during Covid-19-Taking Chinese audience as an example
In recent years, short videos have shown a spurt of development, and they have become the "third language" of the Internet in addition to graphics and voice. Short video software can be easily used without threshold, and at the same time, it can be accurately pushed according to the needs of the audience, quickly covering every age group in China. However, there are many hidden dangers behind the explosion of short video popularity; since people have nothing to do at home due to the epidemic, there is a long-time addiction to it; consequently, falling into the trap of "entertainment to death". Short videos can easily make people feel emotional resonance when they are depressed by the epidemic. People can get some emotional comfort or release when they swipe short videos, so the phenomenon of short video addiction is especially obvious during the epidemic. While there are more and more studies on short videos, there are not enough studies on short video addiction at the audience level. Therefore, based on media dependence theory, this paper takes network belongingness as a mediating variable to explore the influence of the audience"s motivation to watch short videos addictively on short video addiction. The audience was selected from Chinese viewers who watch Jitterbug or TikTok, and through the online questionnaire survey, the filtered questionnaires were quantitatively analyzed by using the SPSS software. The results showed that impulsivity, anxiety, and loneliness were significantly positively correlated with addiction to short videos, were significantly positively correlated with network belongingness, and were significantly positively correlated with short video addiction. The quantitative analysis of the screened questionnaires using SPSS showed that impulsivity, anxiety, and loneliness were significantly positively correlated with addiction to watching short videos, and were significantly positively correlated with the sense of belonging to the network.
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