当够了还不够:强迫性社交媒体消费的行为和动机途径

IF 3.7 3区 管理学 Q2 BUSINESS
Line Lervik-Olsen, Tor Wallin Andreassen, Bob M. Fennis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

强迫性地使用社交媒体有可能降低幸福感。在这项研究中,作者提出强迫性社交媒体消费有两条主要途径。一种是基于习惯的行为;另一种是动机性的,根植于对错过的恐惧。本研究旨在测试这两种驱动因素的前因,以及它们对强迫性社交媒体消费倾向的影响。设计/方法/方法作者采用了定量研究设计,并通过对600名代表性样本的调查来收集数据。作者使用结构方程模型来检验他们的概念模型和假设。性别和年龄被作为调节因子来研究模型的边界条件。作者在概念模型中发现了对所有建议关系的支持。研究结果显示了强迫性社交媒体使用的两种主要表现——总是登录(即社交媒体消费的频率)和过度使用(消费的强度)——这反过来又刺激了强迫性的强化物:断开连接焦虑。研究结果还指出了强迫性社交媒体消费的两条主要途径。一种是基于习惯的行为,另一种是基于害怕错过的动机。此外,作者还确定了这两条路径的关键前提。习惯的形成被观察到是情境线索(在线领域的技术推动)和消费者参与的功能。对错过的恐惧是由禁令规范(在线消费规范)和描述性规范(社会证明)共同塑造的。虽然本研究中提出的强迫性社交媒体消费的前因变量具有强烈而显著的影响,但在总是登录和过度使用社交媒体的因变量中解释的方差表明,可能还有其他驱动因素。这些应该与除性别和年龄以外的调节因子一起探索,以确定模型的潜在边界条件。本工作的主要影响指出,典型或正常的社交媒体使用很容易失控,并成为强迫性的,对消费者的健康和福祉产生不利影响。强迫性社交媒体消费的行为和动机途径很少被探索,也没有被结合起来研究,也没有它们的前因后果。因此,这是一种理解社交媒体使用如何可能导致控制力和幸福感下降的新方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When enough is not enough: behavioral and motivational paths to compulsive social media consumption
Purpose Compulsive social media use has the potential to reduce well-being. In this study, the authors propose that there are two main paths to compulsive social media consumption. One is behavioral and based on habit; the other is motivational and rooted in the fear of missing out. This study aims to test the antecedents of these two drivers as well as their consequences for the tendency to engage in compulsive social media consumption. Design/methodology/approach The authors applied a quantitative research design and collected data through a survey of 600 respondents from a representative sample. The authors used structural equation modeling to test their conceptual model and hypotheses. Gender and age were included as moderators to investigate the model’s boundary conditions. Findings The authors found support for all the suggested relationships in the conceptual model. The findings indicate two main manifestations of compulsive social media use – always being logged in (i.e. the frequency of social media consumption) and excessive use (the intensity of consumption) – that in turn spurred a reinforcer of compulsivity: disconnection anxiety. The findings also indicate two main paths to compulsive social media consumption. One path is behavioral, based on habit, and the other is motivational, based on fear of missing out. Moreover, the authors identified the key antecedents of both paths. Habit formation was observed to be a function of situational cues (technological nudges in the online sphere) and consumer engagement. Fear of missing out was shaped by both injunctive norms (a consumer norm to be online) and descriptive norms (social proof). Research limitations/implications Although the antecedents of compulsive social media consumption suggested in this study have a strong and significant effect, the explained variance in the dependent variables being always logged in and excessive social media use indicates that there might be other drivers as well. These should be explored along with moderators other than gender and age to identify the potential boundary conditions of the model. Practical implications The main implications of the present work point to the “ease” with which typical or normal social media use may spiral out of control and become compulsive, with adverse implications for consumer health and well-being. Originality/value The behavioral and motivational paths to compulsive social media consumption have been less explored and have not yet been studied in conjunction, nor have their antecedents and consequences. Thus, this is a novel approach to understanding how social media use can potentially lead to reduced control and well-being.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
13.60%
发文量
126
期刊介绍: The EJM is receptive to all areas of research which are relevant to marketing academic research, some examples are: ■Sustainability and ethical issues in marketing ■Consumer behaviour ■Advertising and branding issues ■Sales management and personal selling ■Methodology and metatheory of marketing research ■International and export marketing ■Services marketing ■New product development and innovation ■Retailing and distribution ■Macromarketing and societal issues ■Pricing and economic decision making in marketing ■Marketing models
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