读还是不读?阅读 COVID-19 负面新闻的动机。

Esther Niehoff, Maximilian Mittenbühler, Suzanne Oosterwijk
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摘要

在 COVID-19 危机期间,人们面临着大量负面新闻。本研究调查了预期心理影响如何预测阅读个性化和事实性 COVID-19 新闻的决定。首先,参与者根据标题选择是否要阅读新闻文章(或不阅读)。然后,根据一组动机维度对所有标题进行评分。为了检验证实性假设,我们将数据分为探索数据集(n = 398)和验证数据集(n = 399)。通过多层次建模,我们发现四个预先登记的假设得到了有力的支持:对 COVID-19 负面新闻的选择会受到以下因素的正向预测:(a)个人新闻与事实新闻;(b)预期获得的知识量;(c)预期与个人情况的相关性;以及(d)参与者的道德责任感。此外,探索性研究结果表明,标题选择与预期的同情心之间存在正向关系,与预期的不恰当性和感激之情之间存在负向关系,与预期的情感强度之间存在二次关系。这些结果支持这样一种观点,即负面内容具有信息价值,既能帮助人们了解负面事件,又能帮助人们为这些事件做好准备。此外,参与负面内容的动机可能是道德价值观。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, 版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
To read or not to read? Motives for reading negative COVID-19 news.
People were confronted with a barrage of negative news during the COVID-19 crisis. This study investigated how anticipated psychological impact predicted decisions to read personalized and factual COVID-19 news. First, participants chose, based on headlines, whether they wanted to read news articles (or not). Then, all headlines were rated on a set of motivational dimensions. In order to test confirmatory hypotheses, the data were divided into an exploration (n = 398) and validation data set (n = 399). Using multilevel modeling, we found robust support for four preregistered hypotheses: Choice for negative COVID-19 news was positively predicted by (a) personal versus factual news; (b) the anticipated amount of knowledge acquisition; (c) the anticipated relevance to one's own personal situation; and (d) participant's sense of moral duty. Moreover, exploratory findings suggested a positive relationship between headline choice and anticipated compassion, a negative relationship with anticipated inappropriateness and gratitude, and a quadratic relationship with anticipated strength of feelings. These results support the idea that negative content offers informational value, both in terms of understanding negative events and in terms of preparing for these events. Furthermore, engagement with negative content can be motivated by moral values. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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