Engagement With Social Media Posts in Experimental and Naturalistic Settings: How Do Message Incongruence and Incivility Influence Commenting?

Authors

  • Xudong Yu University of Amsterdam
  • Teresa Gil-López Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
  • Cuihua Shen University of California, Davis
  • Magdalena Wojcieszak University of California, Davis; University of Amsterdam

Keywords:

political expression, message incongruence, incivility, social media, anger, third-person effect

Abstract

Research on factors that encourage people to speak out online uses either experimental or observational data, and it is unclear whether patterns detected in one setting apply to the other. This project examines whether message incongruence and incivility influence the likelihood of commenting on social media posts about politics in both controlled and naturalistic settings. An online experiment on American adults using a mock Facebook page (Study 1, N = 424) showed that incivility decreased commenting when the original comment was pro-attitudinal but had no effects when it was counter-attitudinal and that incivility directly depressed commenting (i.e., unmediated via anger), but increased it indirectly through anger. An observational study on Spanish Twitter users (Study 2, N tweets = 4,153) demonstrated that in a naturalistic setting, there were more pro- than counter-attitudinal comments in response to the original tweet, and incivility was not associated with the desire to speak out. The implications are discussed.

Author Biographies

Xudong Yu, University of Amsterdam

Dr. Xudong Yu is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam. +31 (0)638558663

Teresa Gil-López, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

Dr. Teresa Gil-López is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Department of Communication and Journalism, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. She writes about protest media coverage and its impact on public perceptions about dissenting groups and the legitimacy of protest as a political tool. She investigates the ways in which digital technologies may have altered the relationships between social movements, the media, and the citizen discourse. +34 91 624 86 14

Cuihua Shen, University of California, Davis

Dr. Cuihua Shen is a Professor at the Department of Communication, University of California, Davis. 5307520966

Magdalena Wojcieszak, University of California, Davis; University of Amsterdam

Dr. Magdalena Wojcieszak is a Professor at the Department of Communication, University of California, Davis and an Associate Researcher (PI, ERC EXPO) at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam. 5303041659

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Published

2022-10-29

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Articles