末日滚动唤起生存焦虑,助长人性悲观主义?来自伊朗和美国的证据

IF 4.9 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Computers in human behavior reports Pub Date : 2024-05-31 DOI:10.1016/j.chbr.2024.100438
Reza Shabahang , Hyeyeon Hwang , Emma F. Thomas , Mara S. Aruguete , Lynn E. McCutcheon , Gábor Orosz , Abbas Ali Hossein Khanzadeh , Benyamin Mokhtari Chirani , Ágnes Zsila
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引用次数: 0

摘要

媒体恪守 "流血必流血 "的原则,导致负面新闻(如腐败、欺诈、枪击、恐怖主义和战争)在全球范围内占据主导地位。负面偏差助长了人们对负面新闻的偏好,迫使人们将负面新闻置于正面新闻之上。这项跨文化研究受培养理论(Cultivation Theory)等媒体效应理论的启发,探讨了两种不同文化中负面新闻的消费问题(末日滚动)、生存焦虑、对人性的悲观看法以及对公正世界的信念之间的联系。研究对象包括伊朗(620 人)和美国(180 人)大学生社交媒体用户。在这两个样本中,末日滚动都与生存焦虑水平升高有关。此外,仅在伊朗样本中,厌世情绪与末日滚动呈正相关。与 "媒体诱发创伤后应激障碍假说"(Media-induced PTSD Hypothesis)和 "假设破灭理论"(Shattered Assumption Theory)相一致,我们的研究结果表明,长期接触负面新闻会导致生存焦虑的发展。当前的新闻框架过于强调负面性,这可能会助长由末日滚动引发的生存焦虑。
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Doomscrolling evokes existential anxiety and fosters pessimism about human nature? Evidence from Iran and the United States

The media's adherence to “if it bleeds, it leads” has resulted in global dominance of negative news (e.g., stories of corruption, fraud, shootings, terrorism, and war). The appetite for negative news is fueled by negativity bias, which compels people to prioritize negative over positive stories. This cross-cultural study, inspired by media effect theories such as Cultivation Theory, explored the links between problematic consumption of negative news (doomscrolling), existential anxiety, pessimistic views about human nature, and belief about a just world in two distinct cultures. Participants included convenience samples of Iranian (n = 620) and American (n = 180) university-student social media users. Doomscrolling was associated with elevated levels of existential anxiety in both samples. Additionally, misanthropy was positively associated with doomscrolling only in the Iranian sample. Aligned with the Media-induced PTSD Hypothesis and the Shattered Assumption Theory, our findings suggest that prolonged exposure to negative news can contribute to the development of existential anxiety. Current news framing with its overemphasis on negativity could fuel doomscrolling-inspired existential concerns.

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