Reconsidering evidence of moral contagion in online social networks

被引:22
|
作者
Burton, Jason W. [1 ]
Cruz, Nicole [2 ]
Hahn, Ulrike [1 ]
机构
[1] Birkbeck Univ London, Dept Psychol Sci, London, England
[2] Univ New South Wales, Sch Psychol, Sydney, NSW, Australia
关键词
DIFFUSION; SCIENCE; MEDIA;
D O I
10.1038/s41562-021-01133-5
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The ubiquity of social media use and the digital data traces it produces has triggered a potential methodological shift in the psychological sciences away from traditional, laboratory-based experimentation. The hope is that, by using computational social science methods to analyse large-scale observational data from social media, human behaviour can be studied with greater statistical power and ecological validity. However, current standards of null hypothesis significance testing and correlational statistics seem ill-suited to markedly noisy, high-dimensional social media datasets. We explore this point by probing the moral contagion phenomenon, whereby the use of moral-emotional language increases the probability of message spread. Through out-of-sample prediction, model comparisons and specification curve analyses, we find that the moral contagion model performs no better than an implausible XYZ contagion model. This highlights the risks of using purely correlational evidence from large observational datasets and sounds a cautionary note for psychology's merge with big data. Burton et al. probe the question of moral contagion through out-of-sample prediction, model comparisons and specification curve analyses, demonstrating the limitations of conclusions based on large-scale, observational social media datasets alone.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:1629 / +
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Online Social Networks
    Fu, Xiaoming
    Passarella, Andrea
    Quercia, Daniele
    Sala, Alessandra
    Strufe, Thorsten
    COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS, 2016, 73 : 163 - 166
  • [42] Sharing the Load: Contagion and Tolerance of Mood in Social Networks
    Block, Per
    Heyes, Stephanie Burnett
    EMOTION, 2022, 22 (06) : 1193 - 1207
  • [43] Social Role-Aware Emotion Contagion in Image Social Networks
    Yang, Yang
    Jia, Jia
    Wu, Boya
    Tang, Jie
    THIRTIETH AAAI CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, 2016, : 65 - 71
  • [44] CECM: A cognitive emotional contagion model in social networks
    Hung, Chih-Chieh
    Gao, Xiaoyuan
    Liu, Zhen
    Chai, Yumei
    Liu, Tingting
    Liu, Cuijuan
    MULTIMEDIA TOOLS AND APPLICATIONS, 2023, 83 (1) : 1001 - 1023
  • [45] Contact-based social contagion in multiplex networks
    Cozzo, Emanuele
    Banos, Raquel A.
    Meloni, Sandro
    Moreno, Yamir
    PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2013, 88 (05)
  • [46] CECM: A cognitive emotional contagion model in social networks
    Chih-Chieh Hung
    Xiaoyuan Gao
    Zhen Liu
    Yumei Chai
    Tingting Liu
    Cuijuan Liu
    Multimedia Tools and Applications, 2024, 83 : 1001 - 1023
  • [47] Modelling and Analysis of Social Contagion Processes with Dynamic Networks
    Sharpanskykh, Alexei
    Treur, Jan
    COMPUTATIONAL COLLECTIVE INTELLIGENCE: TECHNOLOGIES AND APPLICATIONS, 2013, 8083 : 40 - 50
  • [48] Understanding Social Contagion in Adoption Processes Using Dynamic Social Networks
    Herrera, Mauricio
    Armelini, Guillermo
    Salvaj, Erica
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (10):
  • [49] Social contagion theory: examining dynamic social networks and human behavior
    Christakis, Nicholas A.
    Fowler, James H.
    STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 2013, 32 (04) : 556 - 577
  • [50] Adolescent weight gain and social networks: is there a contagion effect?
    Ali, Mir M.
    Amialchuk, Aliaksandr
    Gao, Song
    Heiland, Frank
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2012, 44 (23) : 2969 - 2983