“They’re always wrong anyway”: exploring differences of credibility, attraction, and behavioral intentions in professional, amateur, and robotic-delivered weather forecasts

IF 1.4 Q2 COMMUNICATION COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1080/01463373.2021.1877164
Patric R. Spence, Chad Edwards, Autumn P. Edwards, Adam M. Rainear, Xianlin Jin
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

ABSTRACT Weather-related communication lends itself well to various styles of delivery and medium. Yet, new communication technologies have changed information consumption in this domain and created changes for broadcast media. Some new media platforms allow the participation of nonprofessional (amateur) agents, whereas others, such as social robotics or chatbots, allow for the removal of a human-element entirely. As these platforms further proliferate in society, it is vital to understand individuals’ perceptions about both the content and the medium, especially in messages which can ultimately remove an individual from danger such as those about weather risks. This experimental study examines differences when individuals view a video/broadcast weather forecast delivered by a professional, an amateur, or a social robot. Results suggest that individuals find professional meteorologists significantly more credible than amateur or robotic counterparts.
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“无论如何,他们总是错的”:探索专业、业余和机器人提供的天气预报的可信度、吸引力和行为意图的差异
与天气相关的传播方式和媒介多种多样。然而,新的通信技术已经改变了这一领域的信息消费,并为广播媒体带来了变化。一些新媒体平台允许非专业(业余)代理的参与,而其他的,如社交机器人或聊天机器人,则允许完全去除人的因素。随着这些平台在社会上的进一步扩散,了解个人对内容和媒介的看法至关重要,特别是那些最终可以使个人远离危险的信息,如天气风险。这项实验研究考察了个人观看由专业、业余或社交机器人提供的视频/广播天气预报时的差异。结果表明,人们认为专业气象学家比业余或机器人同行更可信。
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来源期刊
COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY
COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
32
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