Social sharing of emotion during the collective crisis of COVID-19

被引:0
|
作者
Ma, Gloria W. S. [1 ]
Schone, Jonas P. [1 ]
Parkinson, Brian [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Expt Psychol, Oxford, England
关键词
COVID-19; crisis; emotion regulation; mental health; social sharing of emotion; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; MENTAL-HEALTH; CO-RUMINATION; LIFE EVENTS; ADJUSTMENT; SUPPORT; CLIMATE; MODEL; REGRESSION; CONFLICT;
D O I
10.1111/bjop.12729
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
We collected data from two sources - social media and online questionnaires - to investigate the emotional consequences of social sharing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Study 1 tracked and analysed sentiment of tweets posted over the course of a month in the crisis period and found that users who tweeted more frequently about COVID-19 expressed decreasing negative sentiment and increasing positive sentiment over time. Granger causality tests confirmed that this association was better interpreted in the forward direction (sharing levels predicting sentiment) than in the reverse direction (sentiment predicting sharing levels). Study 2 focused on immediate emotional consequences of sharing COVID-19-related events and found that participants reported improved overall affect about an event after sharing it, especially when that event was a personal experience rather than a news story. Reported positive feelings about both kinds of events were also significantly higher after sharing. Taken together, both studies suggested that social sharing is linked with emotional relief and may therefore help people to deal with their negative experiences during a persistent collective crisis.
引用
收藏
页数:37
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Social Sharing of Emotion During the Collective Crisis of COVID-19
    Ma, Gloria Wai Shan
    Schone, Jonas
    Parkinson, Brian
    [J]. AFFECTIVE SCIENCE, 2022, 3 (01)
  • [2] Social Sharing of Emotion During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Kim, Doha
    Park, Chaewon
    Kim, Eunji
    Han, Jinyoung
    Song, Hayeon
    [J]. CYBERPSYCHOLOGY BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL NETWORKING, 2022, 25 (06) : 369 - 376
  • [3] Peace: a collective construction amid the social crisis of Covid-19
    Hernandez Cubides, Jairo Andres
    [J]. CIUDAD PAZ-ANDO, 2020, 13 (01) : 5 - 8
  • [4] Collective Emotion During Collective Trauma: A Metaphor Analysis of the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Stanley, B. Liahnna
    Zanin, Alaina C.
    Avalos, Brianna L.
    Tracy, Sarah J.
    Town, Sophia
    [J]. QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2021, 31 (10) : 1890 - 1903
  • [5] The collective disorientation of the COVID-19 crisis
    Velasco, Pablo Fernandez
    Perroy, Bastien
    Casati, Roberto
    [J]. GLOBAL DISCOURSE, 2021, 11 (03) : 441 - 462
  • [6] Social distancing simulation during the COVID-19 health crisis
    Lang, Brennan Connor
    Cashin, Melissa
    Thorp, Kristin
    Barrick, Tara
    Walker, Dionne
    Leong-Kee, Susan
    [J]. BMJ SIMULATION & TECHNOLOGY ENHANCED LEARNING, 2021, 7 (03): : 171 - 172
  • [7] DIGITAL SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AT EVENTS DURING THE COVID-19 CRISIS
    Ratten, Vaneesa
    [J]. EVENT MANAGEMENT, 2023, 27 (01): : 19 - 32
  • [8] Collective responsibility and crisis communication: cultural insights into COVID-19 information sharing behaviors in China
    Liu, Miao
    Wei, Liaoliao
    Gan, Chen
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION OF CHINESE CULTURE, 2024, 11 (03) : 373 - 384
  • [9] The Asymmetric Influence of Emotion in the Sharing of COVID-19 Science on Social Media: Observational Study
    Luo, Kai
    Yang, Yang
    Teo, Hock Hai
    [J]. JMIR INFODEMIOLOGY, 2022, 2 (02):
  • [10] Internal crisis communication and the social construction of emotion: university leaders' sensegiving discourse during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Yeomans, Liz
    Bowman, Sarah
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION MANAGEMENT, 2021, 25 (03) : 196 - 213