Department of Economics, University of Pretoria, Gauteng, South Africa.
PLoS One. 2022 Oct 13;17(10):e0275969. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0275969. eCollection 2022.
The study investigates the relationship between trust in social media and beliefs and preventive behaviours in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. We surveyed 1008 respondents in South Africa to study how trust in social media relative to other information sources predicts perceived risk and adoption of preventive behaviours. Although engagement with and trust in social media do not predict less adoption of preventive behaviours, trusting information from social media more than information from mass media or scientists is associated with less risk perception from COVID-19 and reduces the adoption of preventive behaviours (including vaccines).
本研究调查了在 COVID-19 大流行背景下,社交媒体信任与信念和预防行为之间的关系。我们在南非调查了 1008 名受访者,以研究与其他信息源相比,对社交媒体的信任如何预测感知风险和预防行为的采用。尽管对社交媒体的参与度和信任度并不能预测预防行为的采用率降低,但对社交媒体信息的信任程度超过对大众媒体或科学家信息的信任程度,与对 COVID-19 的风险感知降低有关,并减少了预防行为的采用(包括疫苗)。