4 results on '"Media diet"'
Search Results
2. Media Use, Feelings of Being Devalued, and Democratically Corrosive Sentiment in the US.
- Author
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Bimber, Bruce, Labarre, Julien, Gomez, Daniel, Nikiforov, Ilia, and Koc-Michalska, Karolina
- Abstract
We take two approaches to understanding democratically corrosive sentiment (DCS) in the US, which we operationalize in terms of populist attitudes, conspiracy beliefs, and expectation of fraud in the next election. Our first approach is media use, which is not well understood as a correlate of DCS beyond generalities about the harms of social media and partisan news. We distinguish between mainstream news and right-wing media, and between three categories of social media: those facilitating stronger ties among users, those facilitating weaker ties, and extremist Alt-Tech brands. Our second approach to explaining DCS is attitudinal. For this, we introduce a concept called Feelings of Being Devalued (FBD), which we offer as a complement to status threat and sense of material deprivation. Using a survey of our design (
N = 2,000) fielded in the US in 2022, we show that: (1) mainstream news use and attention to right-wing media have opposite relationships with DCS; (2) not only Alt-Tech social media but also stronger-tie media such as Facebook are correlated with DCS, while use of weaker-tie social media such as X are uncorrelated in a model with a rich set of controls; and (3) FBD is strongly associated with DCS—more so than right-wing authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, and ideology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. Facebook as a media digest: user engagement and party references to hostile and friendly media during an election campaign
- Author
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Andrea Ceron, Giovanni Pagano, and Margherita Bordignon
- Subjects
Settore SPS/08 - Sociologia dei Processi Culturali e Comunicativi ,user engagement ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,General Computer Science ,media diet ,social media ,Media hostility ,elections ,political communication ,Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica - Published
- 2022
4. Online Social Endorsement and Covid-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in the United Kingdom
- Author
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Laina Rosebrock, Lucy Jenner, Stefania Innocenti, Andrew J. Pollard, Samantha Vanderslott, Michael Larkin, Andrew R. N. Ross, Johannes Kaiser, Stephan Lewandowsky, Felicity Waite, Ly-Mee Yu, Andrew Chadwick, Ariane Petit, Sinéad Lambe, Alberto Giubilini, Daniel Freeman, Bao Sheng Loe, Helen McShane, Cristian Vaccari, Meghan Conroy, Chadwick, Andrew [0000-0002-5155-8173], Vaccari, Cristian [0000-0003-0380-8921], Ross, Andrew RN [0000-0001-8283-2692], Waite, Felicity [0000-0002-2749-1386], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,social media ,coronavirus ,3605 Screen and Digital Media ,medicine.disease_cause ,lcsh:Communication. Mass media ,Vaccine Related ,Memory ,Political science ,medicine ,conspiracy mentality ,Social media ,Coronavirus ,Communication ,media diet ,Prevention ,Covid19 ,3 Good Health and Well Being ,TeDCog ,vaccination ,lcsh:P87-96 ,Computer Science Applications ,Vaccination ,online social endorsement ,Family medicine ,36 Creative Arts and Writing ,Cognitive Science ,47 Language, Communication and Culture ,Immunization ,news-finds-me ,Covid-19 ,4701 Communication and Media Studies - Abstract
Funder: University of Oxford Covid-19 Research Response Fund; Grant(s): Project Reference: 0009519, We explore the implications of online social endorsement for the Covid-19 vaccination program in the United Kingdom. Vaccine hesitancy is a long-standing problem, but it has assumed great urgency due to the pandemic. By early 2021, the United Kingdom had the world’s highest Covid-19 mortality per million of population. Our survey of a nationally representative sample of UK adults ( N = 5,114) measured socio-demographics, social and political attitudes, media diet for getting news about Covid-19, and intention to use social media and personal messaging apps to encourage or discourage vaccination against Covid-19. Cluster analysis identified six distinct media diet groups: news avoiders, mainstream/official news samplers, super seekers, omnivores, the social media dependent, and the TV dependent. We assessed whether these media diets, together with key attitudes, including Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy, conspiracy mentality, and the news-finds-me attitude (meaning giving less priority to active monitoring of news and relying more on one’s online networks of friends for information), predict the intention to encourage or discourage vaccination. Overall, super-seeker and omnivorous media diets are more likely than other media diets to be associated with the online encouragement of vaccination. Combinations of (a) news avoidance and high levels of the news-finds-me attitude and (b) social media dependence and high levels of conspiracy mentality are most likely to be associated with online discouragement of vaccination. In the direct statistical model, a TV-dependent media diet is more likely to be associated with online discouragement of vaccination, but the moderation model shows that a TV-dependent diet most strongly attenuates the relationship between vaccine hesitancy and discouraging vaccination. Our findings support public health communication based on four main methods. First, direct contact, through the post, workplace, or community structures, and through phone counseling via local health services, could reach the news avoiders. Second, TV public information advertisements should point to authoritative information sources, such as National Health Service (NHS) and other public health websites, which should then feature clear and simple ways for people to share material among their online social networks. Third, informative social media campaigns will provide super seekers with good resources to share, while also encouraging the social media dependent to browse away from social media platforms and visit reliable and authoritative online sources. Fourth, social media companies should expand and intensify their removal of vaccine disinformation and anti-vax accounts, and such efforts should be monitored by well-resourced, independent organizations.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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