作者Lee, Do Eon
ProQuest Information and Learning Co
University of Pennsylvania. Communication
書名Where the Two Trusts Meet : How Social Trust Influences Political Trust in the New Media Environment
出版項2021
說明1 online resource (258 pages)
文字text
無媒介computer
成冊online resource
附註Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: A
Advisor: Delli Carpini, Michael X
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 2021
Includes bibliographical references
In the modern democratic society, where it is difficult to get to know politicians in person or to fully internalize the complex political system, news articles strongly influence the forming and updating of political trust. Technical developments have created the layer of one's personal network between traditional media and its audience by allowing one to share any article with a few clicks. Reflecting this change in how one shares information, this dissertation investigates how online social trust influences one's political trust, a more deep-seated attitude. There is little agreement on how to conceptualize and measure political trust. Study 1 shows how the NPTMS (New Political Trust Measurement Survey) demonstrates a gap between how the public creates the meaning of political trust and how scholars do. It then proposes more reliable and valid measures of political trust. To better simulate information exchange online, this dissertation introduces the concept of OIST (online interpersonal social trust), trust in a particular person from one's online social networks. Study 2 looks at the factors that lead to OIST and explores how to manipulate it in an experimental setting. By combining two different manipulation strategies-partner profile and flashcard exercise-OIST was successfully manipulated without influencing other types of social trust. Based on the NPTMS and OIST manipulation strategies, Study 3 connects OIST with political trust and experimentally demonstrates that they are causally related but moderated by the valence of the shared; receiving an article negatively depicting the government from a person one trusts resulted in a lower level of trust in the subjects of the article. This dissertation uses OIST to also reflect the recent changes in how the public consumes news. It offers evidence that "regular people," who are not necessarily experts or opinion leaders in a particular subject, can make others significantly readjust their levels of political trust. As an increasing number of people consume news through their online social networks, we should note that each individual can influence another's trust in government, and that the effect may accumulate with continued interactions
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : ProQuest, 2021
Mode of access: World Wide Web
主題Mass communications
Web studies
Political science
Polls & surveys
Behavior
News media
Trends
Questionnaires
Political parties
Dissertations & theses
Presidents
Democracy
Partisanship
Influence
COVID-19
Research centers
Hypotheses
Experiments
Society
Trust
Literature reviews
Reading
Media effect
Political trust
Social trust
Electronic books.
0646
0615
0708
ISBN/ISSN9798535593005
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