The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.
Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2024 Aug 6;26:e52058. doi: 10.2196/52058.
Misinformation is a threat to public health. The effective countering of misinformation may require moving beyond the binary classification of fake versus fact to capture the range of schemas that users employ to evaluate social media content. A more comprehensive understanding of user evaluation schemas is necessary.
The goal of this research was to advance the current understanding of user evaluations of social media information and to develop and validate a measurement instrument for assessing social media realism.
This research involved a sequence of 2 studies. First, we used qualitative focus groups (n=48). Second, building on the first study, we surveyed a national sample of social media users (n=442). The focus group data were analyzed using the constant comparison approach. The survey data were analyzed using confirmatory factor analyses and ordinary least squares regression.
The findings showed that social media reality evaluation involves 5 dimensions: falsity, naturality, authenticity, resonance, and social assurance. These dimensions were differentially mapped onto patterns of social media use. Authenticity was strongly associated with the existing global measure of social media realism (P<.001). Naturality, or the willingness to accept artificiality and engineered aspects of social media representations, was linked to hedonic enjoyment (P<.001). Resonance predicted reflective thinking (P<.001), while social assurance was strongly related to addictive use (P<.001). Falsity, the general belief that much of what is on social media is not real, showed a positive association with both frequency (P<.001) and engagement with (P=.003) social media. These results provide preliminary validity data for a social media reality measure that encompasses multiple evaluation schemas for social media content.
The identification of divergent schemas expands the current focus beyond fake versus fact, while the goals, contexts, and outcomes of social media use associated with these schemas can guide future digital media literacy efforts. Specifically, the social media reality measure can be used to develop tailored digital media literacy interventions for addressing diverse public health issues.
错误信息是公共健康的威胁。有效应对错误信息可能需要超越真假二分法,以捕捉用户用来评估社交媒体内容的各种模式。需要更全面地了解用户评估模式。
本研究旨在深入了解用户对社交媒体信息的评估,并开发和验证一种用于评估社交媒体真实性的测量工具。
本研究包含了两项研究。首先,我们使用定性焦点小组(n=48)。其次,基于第一项研究,我们对全国性的社交媒体用户样本(n=442)进行了调查。焦点小组数据使用恒比法进行分析。调查数据使用验证性因子分析和普通最小二乘法回归进行分析。
研究结果表明,社交媒体真实性评估涉及 5 个维度:虚假、自然、真实、共鸣和社会保证。这些维度与社交媒体使用模式存在差异。真实性与现有的社交媒体真实性全球衡量标准密切相关(P<.001)。自然性,或接受社交媒体表现的人工和工程方面的意愿,与享乐愉悦感相关(P<.001)。共鸣预测反思性思维(P<.001),而社会保证与成瘾性使用密切相关(P<.001)。虚假,即普遍认为社交媒体上的很多内容都不真实,与社交媒体的使用频率(P<.001)和参与度(P=.003)呈正相关。这些结果为一个包含社交媒体内容多种评估模式的社交媒体真实性衡量工具提供了初步的有效性数据。
不同模式的识别扩展了当前的焦点,超越了真假二分法,而与这些模式相关的社交媒体使用目标、背景和结果可以指导未来的数字媒体素养努力。具体而言,社交媒体真实性衡量工具可用于制定针对不同公共卫生问题的定制化数字媒体素养干预措施。