"help! Can You Hear Me?": Understanding How Help-Seeking Posts are Overwhelmed on Social Media during a Natural Disaster

被引:3
|
作者
He C. [1 ]
Deng Y. [1 ]
Yang W. [1 ]
Li B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR
关键词
crisis communication; online community; public engagement; seeking help; social media;
D O I
10.1145/3555147
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Posting help-seeking requests on social media has been broadly adopted by victims during natural disasters to look for urgent rescue and supplies. The help-seeking requests need to get sufficient public attention and be promptly routed to the intended target(s) for timely responses. However, the huge volume and diverse types of crisis-related posts on social media might limit help-seeking requests to receive adequate engagement and lead to their overwhelm. To understand this problem, this work proposes a mixed-methods approach to figure out the overwhelm situation of help-seeking requests, and individuals' and online communities' strategies to cope. We focused on the 2021 Henan Floods in China and collected 141,674 help-seeking posts with the keyword "Henan Rainstorm Mutual Aid"on a popular Chinese social media platform Weibo. The findings indicate that help-seeking posts confront critical challenges of both external overwhelm (i.e., an enormous number of non-help-seeking posts with the help-seeking-related keyword distracting public attention) and internal overwhelm (i.e., attention inequality with 5% help-seeking posts receiving more than 95% likes, comments, and shares). We discover linguistic and non-linguistic help-seeking strategies that could help to prevent the overwhelm, such as including contact information, disclosing situational vulnerabilities, using subjective narratives, and structuring help-seeking posts to a normalized syntax. We also illustrate how community members spontaneously work to prevent the overwhelm with their collective wisdom (e.g., norm development through discussion) and collaborative work (e.g., cross-community support). We reflect on how the findings enrich the literature in crisis informatics and raise design implications that facilitate effective help-seeking on social media during natural disasters. © 2022 ACM.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Social Work and Social Media: Online Help-Seeking and the Mental Well-Being of Adolescent Males
    Best, Paul
    Manktelow, Roger
    Taylor, Brian J.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2016, 46 (01): : 257 - 276
  • [32] The use of social media storytelling for help-seeking and help-receiving among Nigerian refugees of the Ukraine-Russia war
    Talabi, Felix Olajide
    Aiyesimoju, Ayodeji Boluwatife
    Lamidi, Ishola Kamorudeen
    Bello, Samson Adedapo
    Okunade, Joshua Kayode
    Ugwuoke, Chinedu Joel
    Gever, Verlumun Celestine
    TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS, 2022, 71
  • [33] Understanding Help-Seeking Avoidance among EFL Students and the Social Climate of EFL Classrooms in Thailand
    Waluyo, Budi
    Tuan, Dacedille Tanco
    JOURNAL OF ASIA TEFL, 2021, 18 (03): : 800 - 815
  • [34] Love Me, Because I Rely on You: Dependency-Oriented Help-Seeking as a Strategy for Human Mating
    Teng, Fei
    Wang, Xijing
    Lei, Qiao
    Poon, Kai-Tak
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024,
  • [35] Social Media Recruitment of Black Adolescents With Internalizing Concerns Into a Mental Health Help-Seeking Study
    Goodwin, Aijah K. B.
    McNulty, Caitlyn
    Hanebutt, Rachel
    Schaeffer, Cindy M.
    TRANSLATIONAL ISSUES IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2024, 10 (02) : 179 - 194
  • [36] SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AS A SIGNIFICANT FACTOR IN WOMENS HELP-SEEKING BEHAVIOR DURING THE CLIMACTERIC PERIOD
    MONTERO, I
    RUIZ, I
    HERNANDEZ, I
    SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1993, 28 (04) : 178 - 183
  • [37] Microtia and Social Media: How Can We Help Our Patients?
    Arslan, Muhammad
    Cottone, Chloe
    Mangona, Erinn
    Rafizadeh, Andre
    Mohsin, Marium
    Frey, Jordan
    JOURNAL OF CRANIOFACIAL SURGERY, 2024, 35 (07) : 2113 - 2115
  • [38] The Call, the Save, and the Threat: Understanding Expert Help-Seeking Behavior During Nonroutine Operative Scenarios
    Novick, Richard J.
    Lingard, Lorelei
    Cristancho, Sayra M.
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 2015, 72 (02) : 302 - 309
  • [39] “Does this Look Infected to You?” Social Network Predictors of Dental Help-Seeking Among Mexican Immigrants
    Erin Pullen
    Brea L. Perry
    Gerardo Maupome
    Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, 2018, 20 : 399 - 409
  • [40] Help-seeking preferences among Chinese college students exposed to a natural disaster: a person-centered approach
    Shi, Wei
    Hall, Brian J.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTRAUMATOLOGY, 2020, 11 (01)