1. College students' perceptions of COVID-19 conversations on social media.
- Author
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Damiano, Amanda D. and Allen Catellier, Jennifer R.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *COVID-19 , *CONVERSATION , *SOCIAL media , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *UNCERTAINTY , *PUBLIC health , *ATTITUDES toward illness , *SURVEYS , *RISK perception , *MEDICAL emergencies , *HEALTH literacy , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH behavior , *HEALTH , *INFORMATION resources , *STUDENT attitudes , *EMOTIONS , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: This project assessed college students' perceptions of social media conversations about COVID-19 in the United States. Participants: A total of 110 college students completed an online survey (N = 110) over two periods of time: April 2020 (n = 60) and September 2020 (n = 50). Method: Measurements included students' perceptions of sentiment, risk, blame, outrage, and opinion/behavioral intention. Results: Survey results showed that college students' attitudes and perceptions of these concepts on social media varied from April to September with negative sentiment, concern, uncertainty, and risk perception decreasing over time while blame and outrage increased over time. A sample of tweets was also examined for these constructs. Conclusions: This study provides important insight on college students' perceptions during a public health emergency and how they use social media as a tool for health information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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