社交媒体上的阴谋论:一个由团体调解的骗局融合在一起的议程

IF 0.2 Q4 COMMUNICATION
Philemon Bantimaroudis, Maria Sideri, D. Ballas, Theodore Panagiotidis, Athanasios Ziogas
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引用次数: 12

摘要

这项研究考察了学生的社交媒体互动与他们对阴谋本质的亚文化探索之间的关系。来自四所欧洲大学的476名学生参加了一项关于社交媒体小组讨论中阴谋论的调查。在调查中,我们考察了与学生阴谋论信仰相关的各种社会和媒体因素。这项探索性研究的结果表明,学生将社交媒体视为新闻来源;此外,比起传统的大众媒体,他们更信任社交媒体。这项研究揭示了人口、个人和技术因素,这些因素鼓励了一种中介的阴谋话语。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Conspiracism on social media: An agenda melding of group-mediated deceptions
This study examines students’ social media interactions in relation to their subcultural explorations of a conspiratorial nature. A sample of 476 students from four European universities participated in a survey about conspiracy theories in social media group discussions. In the survey, we examined various social and media factors in relation to students’ beliefs in conspiracy theories. The results of this exploratory study reveal that students treat social media as news sources; furthermore, they trust social media more than traditional mass media. The study reveals demographic, personal and technological factors that encourage a mediated conspiratorial discourse.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics (MCP) is a peer-reviewed journal aiming at analysing social and cultural communication processes with an interdisciplinary approach. MCP pays attention to contemporary issues striving to encourage academic responses to pressing world events, offering policy-oriented thinking. The content focus is critical, in-depth analysis and engaged research of the intersections of communication and media studies, sociology, politics, economics, and cultural studies with the aim of keeping academic analysis in dialogue with the practical world of communications, culture and politics. The journal publishes theoretical and empirical contributions from a wide and diverse community of researchers, and from any methodological and epistemological approach.
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