Bail Christopher A
Christopher A. Bail is with the Department of Sociology, Duke University, Durham, NC.
Am J Public Health. 2016 Jul;106(7):1173-80. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2016.303181. Epub 2016 May 19.
To determine whether exchanges of emotional language between health advocacy organizations and social media users predict the spread of posts about autism spectrum disorders (ASDs).
I created a Facebook application that tracked views of ASD advocacy organizations' posts between July 19, 2011, and December 18, 2012. I evaluated the association between exchanges of emotional language and viral views of posts, controlling for additional characteristics of posts, the organizations that produced them, the social media users who viewed them, and the broader social environment.
Exchanges of emotional language between advocacy organizations and social media users are strongly associated with viral views of posts.
Social media outreach may be more successful if organizations invite emotional dialogue instead of simply conveying information about ASDs. Yet exchanges of angry language may contribute to the viral spread of misinformation, such as the rumor that vaccines cause ASDs.
确定健康倡导组织与社交媒体用户之间的情感语言交流是否能预测有关自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)帖子的传播情况。
我创建了一个脸书应用程序,用于追踪2011年7月19日至2012年12月18日期间自闭症谱系障碍倡导组织帖子的浏览量。我评估了情感语言交流与帖子的病毒式浏览量之间的关联,并控制了帖子的其他特征、发布帖子的组织、浏览帖子的社交媒体用户以及更广泛的社会环境。
倡导组织与社交媒体用户之间的情感语言交流与帖子的病毒式浏览量密切相关。
如果组织邀请情感对话而非仅仅传达有关自闭症谱系障碍的信息,社交媒体宣传可能会更成功。然而,愤怒语言的交流可能会助长错误信息的病毒式传播,比如疫苗会导致自闭症谱系障碍的谣言。