Title
I don’t care about who you are, but what you are doing for me? Examining perceptions of helpful comments and identity in user-generated content
Abstract
User-generated content is common feature of news websites. Individuals use these features to express thoughts, opinions, and suggestions about news stories. Previous research suggests an impact of identity and helper heuristics on specific outcomes in user-generated contributions in online news commenting forums. The current research sought to extend previous research to specifically examining agency cues and information in online heuristic processing. Results suggest that being helpful in computer-mediated contexts results in several positive perceptions for the helpful agent, more so than providing ambiguous cues about the identity of the user posting the content. The findings help establish conditions under which agency affordances positively impact perceptions and have direct implications for the MAIN model.
Department(s)
Communication
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/1041794X.2020.1770319
Keywords
anonymity, identity, MAIN model, User-generated content
Publication Date
5-26-2020
Recommended Citation
Spates, Stephen A., Renee Kaufmann, Xialing Lin, Kenneth A. Lachlan, and Patric R. Spence. "I don’t care about who you are, but what you are doing for me? Examining perceptions of helpful comments and identity in user-generated content." Southern Communication Journal 85, no. 3 (2020): 155-165.
Journal Title
Southern Communication Journal