COVID-19:审视传统和社交媒体关注在放大风险中的作用

IF 1.5 Q2 COMMUNICATION Journal of Creative Communications Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1177/09732586231172045
William Kinnally, P. Kohl, S. Collins, M. Eichholz, Chelsea Schafer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这项研究对美国居民进行了一项具有全国代表性的调查(N = 1969),以研究传统新闻媒体来源和社交媒体上对COVID-19信息的关注是否与个人和公共伤害的更高感知风险相关。正如预期的那样,我们发现传统新闻媒体来源对COVID-19信息的关注与感知COVID-19风险之间存在正相关关系。我们还发现,关注COVID-19社交媒体帖子与感知风险之间存在正相关,但仅在共和党人中存在。其他风险认知增加的预测因素包括年龄、女性以及对当地居家秩序的认识。
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COVID-19: Examining the Roles of Traditional and Social Media Attention in the Amplification of Risk
This study used a nationally representative survey of U.S. residents (N = 1,969) to examine whether attention to information about COVID-19 in traditional news media sources and on social media correlated with a higher perceived risk of personal and public harm. As anticipated, we found a positive association between attention to COVID-19 information in traditional news media sources and the perceived risks of COVID-19. We also found a positive association between attention to COVID-19 social media posts and perceived risks but only among Republicans. Other predictors of increased risk perception included age, being female and awareness of a local stay-at-home order.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
26.70%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The Journal of Creative Communications promotes inquiry into contemporary communication issues within wider social, economic, marketing, cultural, technological and management contexts, and provides a forum for the discussion of theoretical and practical insights emerging from such inquiry. The journal encourages a new language of analysis for contemporary communications research and publishes articles dealing with innovative and alternate ways of doing research that push the frontiers of conceptual dialogue in communication theory and practice. The journal engages with a wide range of issues and themes in the areas of cultural studies, digital media, media studies, technoculture, marketing communication, organizational communication, communication management, mass and new media, and development communication, among others. JOCC is a double blind peer reviewed journal.
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