Stokes Courtney, Senkbeil Jason C
Research Project Coordinator, Department of Geography, Center for Ethics and Social Responsibility, University of Alabama, United States.
Associate Professor, Department of Geography, University of Alabama, United States.
Disasters. 2017 Jan;41(1):194-208. doi: 10.1111/disa.12192. Epub 2016 Mar 14.
This paper represents one of the first attempts to analyse the many ways in which Facebook and Twitter were used during a tornado disaster. Comparisons between five randomly selected campus samples and a city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, sample revealed that campus samples used Facebook and Twitter significantly more both before and after the tornado, but Facebook usage was not significantly different after the event. Furthermore, differences in social media usage and other forms of communication before the tornado were found for age, education, and years lived in Tuscaloosa. Generally, age and education were inversely proportionate to social media usage. Influences on shelter-seeking actions varied between social media users and three random samples of non-social media users; however, it appears that social media respondents were likely to be using a smartphone simultaneously to access warning polygon information, to receive text message alerts, and to listen or respond to environmental cues.
本文是首批尝试分析在龙卷风灾难期间Facebook和Twitter多种使用方式的研究之一。对五个随机选取的校园样本与阿拉巴马州塔斯卡卢萨市的一个样本进行比较后发现,校园样本在龙卷风前后使用Facebook和Twitter的频率明显更高,但事件发生后Facebook的使用情况没有显著差异。此外,还发现龙卷风来临前,在年龄、教育程度以及在塔斯卡卢萨居住的年限方面,社交媒体使用情况和其他沟通方式存在差异。总体而言,年龄和教育程度与社交媒体使用呈反比。社交媒体用户和三个随机选取的非社交媒体用户样本在寻求避难所行动上受到的影响各不相同;然而,社交媒体受访者似乎可能同时在使用智能手机来获取预警多边形信息、接收短信警报以及收听或回应环境线索。