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Eliciting and Receiving Online Support: Using Computer-Aided Content Analysis to Examine the Dynamics of Online Social Support

Authors :
Wang, Yi-Chia
Kraut, Robert E
Levine, John M
Source :
Journal of Medical Internet Research, Vol 17, Iss 4, p e99 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2015.

Abstract

BackgroundAlthough many people with serious diseases participate in online support communities, little research has investigated how participants elicit and provide social support on these sites. ObjectiveThe first goal was to propose and test a model of the dynamic process through which participants in online support communities elicit and provide emotional and informational support. The second was to demonstrate the value of computer coding of conversational data using machine learning techniques (1) by replicating results derived from human-coded data about how people elicit support and (2) by answering questions that are intractable with small samples of human-coded data, namely how exposure to different types of social support predicts continued participation in online support communities. The third was to provide a detailed description of these machine learning techniques to enable other researchers to perform large-scale data analysis in these communities. MethodsCommunication among approximately 90,000 registered users of an online cancer support community was analyzed. The corpus comprised 1,562,459 messages organized into 68,158 discussion threads. Amazon Mechanical Turk workers coded (1) 1000 thread-starting messages on 5 attributes (positive and negative emotional self-disclosure, positive and negative informational self-disclosure, questions) and (2) 1000 replies on emotional and informational support. Their judgments were used to train machine learning models that automatically estimated the amount of these 7 attributes in the messages. Across attributes, the average Pearson correlation between human-based judgments and computer-based judgments was .65. ResultsPart 1 used human-coded data to investigate relationships between (1) 4 kinds of self-disclosure and question asking in thread-starting posts and (2) the amount of emotional and informational support in the first reply. Self-disclosure about negative emotions (beta=.24, P

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14388871
Volume :
17
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Medical Internet Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fd87f387222c4650b52788167b964f16
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3558