Department of Psychological Science, University of California Irvine, Irvine, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 19;16(1):e0245651. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245651. eCollection 2021.
How do interactions with an ideologically extreme online community affect cognition? In this paper, we examine whether engagement with an online neo-Nazi forum is associated with more one-sided, "black and white" thinking. Using naturalistic language data, we examined differences in integrative complexity, a measure of the degree to which people acknowledge and reconcile conflicting ideas and viewpoints, and contrasted it with Language Style Matching, a measure of group cohesion. In a large web scraping study (N = 1,891), we tested whether two measures of engagement and interaction with the community are associated with less complex, balanced cognition. Using hierarchical regression modeling, we found that both individuals who had been community members for longer and those who had posted more tended to show less complexity in their language, even when accounting for mean differences between individuals. However, these differences in integrative complexity were distinct from group cohesion, which actually decreased with our measures of engagement. Despite small effect sizes, these findings indicate that ideologically extreme online communities may exacerbate the views of their members and contribute to ever-widening polarized cognitions.
与意识形态极端的在线社区互动如何影响认知?本文探讨了与在线新纳粹论坛的互动是否与更片面、“非黑即白”的思维方式有关。我们使用自然语言数据,检验了综合复杂性的差异,这是衡量人们承认和调和冲突观点和观点的程度的指标,并将其与语言风格匹配进行了对比,这是衡量群体凝聚力的指标。在一项大型网络抓取研究(N=1891)中,我们测试了社区参与和互动的两个衡量标准是否与更不复杂、更平衡的认知相关。通过分层回归建模,我们发现,无论是社区成员时间更长还是发帖更多的人,他们的语言表达往往都不那么复杂,即使考虑到个体之间的平均差异也是如此。然而,这些综合复杂性的差异与群体凝聚力不同,后者实际上随着我们的参与度衡量标准而下降。尽管效应大小较小,但这些发现表明,意识形态极端的在线社区可能会加剧其成员的观点,并导致日益扩大的两极化认知。