| Literature DB >> 30934012 |
Jolie Baumann Wormwood1, Yu-Ru Lin2, Spencer K Lynn3,4, Lisa Feldman Barrett4,5, Karen S Quigley4,6.
Abstract
Exposure to media coverage of mass violence has been shown to predict poorer mental health symptomology. However, it is unknown whether such media coverage can have ubiquitous effects on average community members, extending to biological and perceptual processes that underlie everyday decision making and behavior. Here, we used a repeated-measures design over the first anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings to track participants' self-reported distress, their eye blink startle reactivity while viewing images of the bombings, and their ability to perceptually distinguish armed from unarmed individuals in a behavioral shooting task. We leveraged a computational linguistics method in which we sampled news content from the sources our participants most commonly self-reported reading, and then quantified both the extent of news coverage about the marathon and the affective tone of that news coverage. Results revealed that participants experienced greater current distress, greater physiological reactivity to threats, and poorer perceptual sensitivity when recent news coverage of the marathon contained more affectively negative words. This is the first empirical work to examine relationships between the media's affective tone in its coverage of mass violence and individuals' threat perception and physiological threat reactivity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30934012 PMCID: PMC6443148 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Estimated means and standard errors by wave.
| Variable | Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self-reported Distress | 10.69 (1.06)a | 9.17 (1.06) | 7.21 (1.07)a |
| Startle Amplitude | 33.92 (3.26)a | 20.74 (2.12)a | 27.33 (2.95) |
| Perceptual Sensitivity ( | 0.55 (.05)a | 0.68 (0.05)a | 0.66 (0.05) |
| Threat Response Bias ( | 0.19 (0.04)a | 0.05 (0.05)a,b | 0.21 (0.05)b |
| Extent of Marathon-related Media Content (Zwi) | 0.23 (0.01)a | 0.49 (0.003)a | 0.41 (0.01)a |
| Affective Tone of Marathon-related Media Content (Xwi) | 0.04 (0.004)a | 0.10 (0.001)a | 0.12 (0.003)a |
Note: A slopes-as-intercepts approach in HLM was used to generate estimated means and standard errors (given in parentheses) for each variable across waves. Significant differences (α = .05, two-tailed) were determined using chi-square comparisons and are indicated by shared superscripts.
Changes in affective tone of recent marathon-related coverage predicts distress, startle reactivity, perceptual sensitivity, and shooting behavior.
| Outcome | B | SE | t-ratio | df | p | Cohen’s d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-reported Distress | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 9.11 | 0.74 | 12.25 | 90 | < .001 | 2.58 |
| Model Slope | -28.26 | 12.42 | 2.28 | 90 | .025 | 0.48 |
| Startle Amplitude | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 27.21 | 1.65 | 16.47 | 90 | < .001 | 3.47 |
| Model Slope | -137.02 | 50.86 | 2.69 | 90 | .008 | 0.56 |
| Perceptual Sensitivity | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 0.64 | 0.03 | 19.58 | 90 | < .001 | 4.12 |
| Model Slope | 1.74 | 0.62 | 2.79 | 90 | .006 | 0.59 |
| Response Bias | 0.38 | 0.08 | 5.02 | 90 | < .001 | 1.06 |
| Threat Response Bias | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 0.15 | 0.03 | 4.78 | 90 | < .001 | 1.01 |
| Model Slope | -0.77 | 0.58 | 1.33 | 90 | 0.185 | 0.28 |
| P. Sensitivity | 0.27 | 0.06 | 4.25 | 90 | < .001 | 0.9 |
Note: Higher affective tone values indicate more positive content while lower affective tone values indicate more negative content. Model uses robust standard errors (SE; i.e., random effects). Model coefficients (B) are unstandardized. Model Slope represents the coefficient estimates for the variable affective tone, which is centered around each participant’s own mean. Slopes can be interpreted as the predicted change in the outcome variable associated with a 1 unit increase in affective tone. For example, a participant’s startle amplitude is predicted to be 137.02 μV lower when there are an even number of positive and negative affective words in recent media coverage related to the Bombings than when all the affective words are negative.
*p < .05
**p < .0125 (Bonferroni-corrected alpha)
Fig 1Simple slopes representation of models predicting changes in distress (Panel A), startle reactivity (Panel B), perceptual sensitivity (Panel C), and threat response bias (Panel D) by changes in the affective tone of recent marathon-related coverage. Affective tone of recent marathon-related media coverage was calculated to be time-locked for each participant at each Wave to include only media coverage from the two weeks prior to that participant's laboratory visit. Model slopes are represented by a black line, with ±1 standard error of the slope and intercept for each model shown as a gray-shaded area. SD stands for standard deviation. The model for perceptual sensitivity (Panel C) is plotted at the within-person mean for threat response bias, and the model for threat response bias (Panel D) is plotted at the within-person mean for perceptual sensitivity.
Changes in extent of recent marathon-related coverage predicts distress, startle reactivity, perceptual sensitivity, and shooting behavior.
| Outcome | B | SE | t-ratio | df | p | Cohen’s d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-reported Distress | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 9.11 | 0.74 | 12.23 | 90 | < .001 | 2.58 |
| Model Slope | -7.13 | 3.41 | 2.09 | 90 | .039 | 0.44 |
| Startle Amplitude | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 27.23 | 1.65 | 16.47 | 90 | < .001 | 3.47 |
| Model Slope | -43.4 | 14.34 | 3.03 | 90 | .003 | 0.64 |
| Perceptual Sensitivity | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 0.64 | 0.03 | 19.56 | 90 | < .001 | 4.12 |
| Model Slope | 0.51 | 0.2 | 2.58 | 90 | .011 | 0.54 |
| Response Bias | 0.39 | 0.08 | 5.12 | 90 | < .001 | 1.08 |
| Threat Response Bias | ||||||
| Model Intercept | 0.15 | 0.03 | 4.78 | 90 | < .001 | 1.01 |
| Model Slope | -0.41 | 0.17 | 2.45 | 90 | .016 | 0.52 |
| P. Sensitivity | 0.27 | 0.06 | 4.45 | 90 | < .001 | 0.94 |
Note: Model uses robust standard errors (i.e., random effects). Model coefficients (B) are unstandardized. Model Slope represents the coefficient estimates for the extent of recent marathon-related media content, which is centered around each participant’s own mean. Slopes can be interpreted as the predicted change in the outcome variable associated with a 1 unit increase in the extent of recent Marathon-related coverage. For example, a participant’s startle amplitude is predicted to be 43.40 μV lower when the likelihood of a reader seeing at least one marathon related article every day in the four newspapers assessed here is 100% than when it is 0%.
*p < .05
**p < .0125 (Bonferroni-corrected alpha)
Fig 2Simple slopes representation of models predicting changes in distress (Panel A), startle reactivity (Panel B), perceptual sensitivity (Panel C), and Threat response bias (Panel D) by changes in the extent of recent marathon-related coverage. Extent of recent marathon-related media coverage was calculated to be time-locked for each participant at each Wave to include only media coverage from the two weeks prior to that participant's laboratory visit. Model slopes are represented by a black line, with ±1 standard error of the slope and intercept for each model shown as a gray-shaded area. SD stands for standard deviation. The model for perceptual sensitivity (Panel C) is plotted at the within-person mean for threat response bias, and the model for threat response bias (Panel D) is plotted at the within-person mean for perceptual sensitivity.