| Literature DB >> 34068987 |
Huiyun Zhu1, Kecheng Liu2,3.
Abstract
This research aims to capture the interplay between risk perception and social media posting through a case study of COVID-19 in Wuhan to support risk response and decision making. Dividing users on Sina Weibo into the government, the media, the public, and other users, we address two main research questions: Whose posting affects risk perception and vice versa? How do different categories of social media users' posts affect risk perception and vice versa? We use Granger causality analysis and impulse response functions to answer the research questions. The results show that from one perspective, the government and the media on Sina Weibo play critical roles in forming and affecting risk perceptions. From another perspective, risk perception promotes the posting of the media and the public on Sina Weibo. Since government's posting and media's posting can significantly enhance the public's perceptions of risk issues, the government and the media must remain vigilant to provide credible risk-related information.Entities:
Keywords: Granger causality analysis; impulse response functions; risk perception; social media; social media posting
Year: 2021 PMID: 34068987 PMCID: PMC8155966 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
The relationship between social media posting and risk perception.
| No. | Conclusions and Reference | Data Sources |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Social media posting correlated with the level of risk perception Changes in the volume of information in social media are followed by changes in risk perception [ | Twitter and Questionnaire |
| 2 | Changes in risk perceptions are followed by changes in social media posting and reposting behavior [ | Sina Weibo |
| 3 | Posting information on social media is positively associated with risk perceptions [ | Questionnaire |
| 4 | Posting and receiving risk information not only affected risk perceptions but also directly or indirectly influenced preventive behavioral intentions [ | Questionnaire |
Descriptive statistics of social media data.
| Type of Users | Number | Number of | Average Number of | Minimum Number of Microblogs Per User | Maximum Number of Microblogs Per User |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Government | 292 | 4900 | 16.78 | 1 | 840 |
| Media | 237 | 28,985 | 122.30 | 1 | 8208 |
| Public | 14,017 | 31,552 | 2.25 | 1 | 589 |
| Others | 661 | 6971 | 10.55 | 1 | 1731 |
Figure 1Time series of risk perception index.
Definition of variables.
| Variable Type | Variable | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Endogenous variables |
| Risk perception, expressed by Baidu Search Index within time window |
|
| The volume of government’s posting within time window | |
|
| The volume of media’s posting within time window | |
|
| The volume of public’s posting within time window | |
|
| The volume of other users’ posting within time window | |
| Exogenous variables |
| The number of new cases within the time window |
Figure 2Time series of the volume of microblogs.
Figure 3Time series of the number of new cases.
Results of Granger causality tests between government, media, public, and other users’ posting and risk perceptions.
| Null Hypothesis | Lag Length | F-Value, | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Risk perception is not the Granger reason for government’s posting. | Two days | 3.523, 0.172 | Accept |
| Government’s posting is not the Granger reason for risk perception. | Two days | 6.5978, 0.037 | Reject |
| Risk perception is not the Granger reason for media’s posting. | One day | 8.2307, 0.004 | Reject |
| Media’s posting is not the Granger reason for risk perception. | One day | 5.0754, 0.024 | Reject |
| Risk perception is not the Granger reason for public’s posting. | One day | 7.8697, 0.005 | Reject |
| Public’s posting is not the Granger reason for risk perception. | One day | 0.05545, 0.814 | Accept |
| Risk perception is not the Granger reason for other users’ posting. | Two days | 4.1178, 0.128 | Accept |
| Other users’ posting is not the Granger reason for risk perception. | Two days | 7.7616, 0.021 | Reject |
Figure 4Causal channels of posting and risk perception.
Figure 5The dynamic effects of the postings on risk perception.
Figure 6The dynamic effects of risk perception on the postings.