Lau Annie Y S, Kwok Trevor M Y, Coiera Enrico
Centre for Health Informatics, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Stud Health Technol Inform. 2010;160(Pt 1):33-7.
This paper presents an online prospective study investigating whether the strength of social feedback, i.e. the proportion of persons who concur or do not concur with one's own answer to a question, influences the way one answers health-related questions. Two hundred and twenty-seven undergraduate students were recruited to use an online search engine to answer six health-related questions. Subjects recorded their pre- and post-search answers to each question and their level of confidence in these answers. After answering each question post-search, subjects were presented with a summary of post-search answers provided by previous subjects and were asked to answer the question again. There was a statistically significant relationship between the absolute number of others with a different answer (the crowd's opinion volume) and the likelihood of an individual changing an answer (P<.0001). Subjects' likelihood of changing answer increased as the percentage of others with a different answer (the crowd's opinion density) increased (P=0.047). Overall, 98.3% of subjects did not change their answer when it concurred with the majority (i.e. >50%) of subjects. When subjects had a post-search answer that did not concur with the majority, they were 24% more likely to change answer than those with answers that concurred (P<.0001). This study provides empirical evidence that strength of social feedback influences the way healthcare consumers answer health-related questions.
本文呈现了一项在线前瞻性研究,该研究旨在探究社会反馈的强度,即赞同或不赞同某人对某个问题答案的人群比例,是否会影响人们回答健康相关问题的方式。招募了227名本科生,让他们使用在线搜索引擎回答六个健康相关问题。受试者记录了他们在搜索前后对每个问题的答案以及对这些答案的信心水平。在搜索后回答每个问题后,向受试者展示之前受试者提供的搜索后答案总结,并要求他们再次回答问题。答案不同的其他人的绝对数量(群体意见量)与个体改变答案的可能性之间存在统计学上的显著关系(P<0.0001)。随着答案不同的其他人的百分比(群体意见密度)增加,受试者改变答案的可能性也增加(P=0.047)。总体而言,当受试者的答案与大多数人(即>50%)的答案一致时,98.3%的受试者没有改变答案。当受试者的搜索后答案与大多数人不一致时,他们改变答案的可能性比答案一致的受试者高24%(P<0.0001)。这项研究提供了实证证据,表明社会反馈的强度会影响医疗保健消费者回答健康相关问题的方式。