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Online Interaction Turns the Congeniality Bias Into an Uncongeniality Bias

Autor
Buttliere, Brett
Huff, Markus
Vogel, Moritz
Rabl, Lisa
Zimmermann, Anja
Buder, Jürgen
Data publikacji
2023
Abstrakt (EN)

Online phenomena like echo chambers and polarization are believed to be driven by humans’ penchant to selectively expose themselves to attitudinally congenial content. However, if like-minded content were the only predictor of online behavior, heated debate and flaming on the Internet would hardly occur. Research has overlooked how online behavior changes when people are given an opportunity to reply to dissenters. Three experiments (total N = 320; convenience student samples from Germany) and an internal meta-analysis show that in a discussion-forum setting where participants can reply to earlier comments larger cognitive conflict between participant attitude and comment attitude predicts higher likelihood to respond (uncongeniality bias). When the discussion climate was friendly (vs. oppositional) to the views of participants, the uncongeniality bias was more pronounced and was also associated with attitude polarization. These results suggest that belief polarization on social media may not only be driven by congeniality but also by conflict.

Słowa kluczowe EN
social media
confirmation bias
cognitive conflict
online communication
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki o komunikacji społecznej i mediach
Czasopismo
Psychological Science
Tom
34
Zeszyt
10
Strony od-do
1055-1068
ISSN
0956-7976
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2023-09-18
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa