Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?

Emerging social media platforms such as Twitter and its Chinese equivalent Weibo have become important in information-sharing and communication. They are also gradually becoming stronger in guiding public opinion. When compared with traditional media, these platforms have salient characteristics, su...

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Main Authors: Yizhi Wang, Yuwan Dai, Hao Li, Lili Song
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.596071/full
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spelling doaj-bbe27e2ad32340dabd57fca83fffbff92021-06-24T06:22:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-06-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.596071596071Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?Yizhi Wang0Yizhi Wang1Yuwan Dai2Yuwan Dai3Hao Li4Hao Li5Lili Song6Lili Song7Department of Psychology and Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaSchool of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaDepartment of Psychology and Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaSchool of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaPlateau Center of Brain Sciences, Tibet University, Lhasa, ChinaSchool of Medicine, Tibet University, Lhasa, ChinaCAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Beijing, ChinaDepartment of Psychology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, ChinaEmerging social media platforms such as Twitter and its Chinese equivalent Weibo have become important in information-sharing and communication. They are also gradually becoming stronger in guiding public opinion. When compared with traditional media, these platforms have salient characteristics, such as highly efficient dissemination of information and interactive commentary, which can contribute to information overload. In earlier research, only the effect of social media on attitude change has been studied, but the specific mechanism of this effect in the context of information overload has not been found. To answer this question, we measured the attitude change of participants after they read Weibo posts about street vendors. A 2 (post-attitude: positive posts vs. negative posts) × 4 (reading time: 35 vs. 25 vs. 15 vs. 5 min) experiment was set up, and the Single Category Implicit Attitude Test was used to measure the implicit attitudes. The interaction effect revealed that in both positive and negative posts, less reading time (i.e., information overload) had a stronger influence. Users were more easily persuaded by posts under high overload. Furthermore, the changes in the attitudes of users were not simply stronger with more information. We found three stages, namely, obedience, resistance, and acceptance, with different mechanisms. Therefore, in the positive information overload condition, the attitudes of individuals eventually change in a positive way. In the negative information overload condition, individuals tend to be biased against the group being reported.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.596071/fullattitude changesocial mediainformation overloadWeiborepeated informationpersuasion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yizhi Wang
Yizhi Wang
Yuwan Dai
Yuwan Dai
Hao Li
Hao Li
Lili Song
Lili Song
spellingShingle Yizhi Wang
Yizhi Wang
Yuwan Dai
Yuwan Dai
Hao Li
Hao Li
Lili Song
Lili Song
Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?
Frontiers in Psychology
attitude change
social media
information overload
Weibo
repeated information
persuasion
author_facet Yizhi Wang
Yizhi Wang
Yuwan Dai
Yuwan Dai
Hao Li
Hao Li
Lili Song
Lili Song
author_sort Yizhi Wang
title Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?
title_short Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?
title_full Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?
title_fullStr Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?
title_full_unstemmed Social Media and Attitude Change: Information Booming Promote or Resist Persuasion?
title_sort social media and attitude change: information booming promote or resist persuasion?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Emerging social media platforms such as Twitter and its Chinese equivalent Weibo have become important in information-sharing and communication. They are also gradually becoming stronger in guiding public opinion. When compared with traditional media, these platforms have salient characteristics, such as highly efficient dissemination of information and interactive commentary, which can contribute to information overload. In earlier research, only the effect of social media on attitude change has been studied, but the specific mechanism of this effect in the context of information overload has not been found. To answer this question, we measured the attitude change of participants after they read Weibo posts about street vendors. A 2 (post-attitude: positive posts vs. negative posts) × 4 (reading time: 35 vs. 25 vs. 15 vs. 5 min) experiment was set up, and the Single Category Implicit Attitude Test was used to measure the implicit attitudes. The interaction effect revealed that in both positive and negative posts, less reading time (i.e., information overload) had a stronger influence. Users were more easily persuaded by posts under high overload. Furthermore, the changes in the attitudes of users were not simply stronger with more information. We found three stages, namely, obedience, resistance, and acceptance, with different mechanisms. Therefore, in the positive information overload condition, the attitudes of individuals eventually change in a positive way. In the negative information overload condition, individuals tend to be biased against the group being reported.
topic attitude change
social media
information overload
Weibo
repeated information
persuasion
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.596071/full
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