Department of Management and Organizations, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University.
Department of Psychology, University of South Florida.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2024 Jul;127(1):84-103. doi: 10.1037/pspa0000379. Epub 2024 Feb 29.
Moral panics have regularly erupted in society, but they appear almost daily on social media. We propose that social media helps fuel moral panics by combining perceived societal threats with a powerful signal of social amplification-virality. Eight studies with multiple methods test a social amplification model of moral panics in which virality amplifies perceptions of threats posed by deviant behavior and ideas, prompting moral outrage expression. Three naturalistic studies of Twitter ( = 237,230) reveal that virality predicts moral outrage in response to tweets about controversial issues, even when controlling for specific tweet content. Five experiments ( = 1,499) reveal the causal impact of virality on outrage expression and suggest that feelings of danger mediate this effect. This work connects classic ideas about moral panics with ongoing research on social media and provides a perspective on the nature of moral outrage. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
社会上经常会爆发道德恐慌,但社交媒体上几乎每天都有此类事件出现。我们提出,社交媒体通过将感知到的社会威胁与强大的社会放大信号(即传播力)结合在一起,从而助长了道德恐慌。八项采用多种方法的研究检验了道德恐慌的社会放大模型,该模型认为传播力放大了对越轨行为和思想构成的威胁的感知,从而引发了道德义愤的表达。对 Twitter 的三项自然主义研究(=237,230)表明,即使控制了特定推文的内容,传播力也能预测对涉及争议性问题的推文的道德义愤,这一发现揭示了传播力对愤怒表达的因果影响,并表明危险感中介了这种影响。这项工作将经典的道德恐慌思想与社交媒体的持续研究联系起来,为道德义愤的本质提供了一个视角。