Journal
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chb.2022.107522
Keywords
Information seeking; Information processing; Media trust; Emotional response; COVID-19
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This study examines the influence of health-risk information seeking on media trust and emotions, and how information processing methods moderate this link. The results indicate that seeking COVID-19-related information from the media reduces the belief that media distort reality, leading to decreased fear and increased calmness. The study also finds that heuristic processing and systematic processing have differential effects on the relationship between information seeking and media beliefs.
Previous literature gave considerable attention to antecedents of health-risk information seeking, but few elaborated on its cognitive and affective outcomes, and how individual differences may influence this link. Based on a survey (N = 1743) conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, we seek to interpret the influence of health -risk information seeking on media trust and emotions, and how methods of information processing moderate this link. Results demonstrated that COVID-19-related information seeking from the media decreased the belief that media distort reality, which in turn decreased fear; and increased the belief that media provide validity cues, which further increased calmness. The negative relationship between information seeking and the belief that media distort reality was stronger when heuristic processing was high, while the positive association between information seeking and the belief that media provide validity cues was strong only when systematic processing was low. Results contributed to information seeking studies by identifying the cognitive and affective outcomes of information seeking, and also lent insights to health-risk communication studies by showing how information seeking would increase media trust and positive emotions, and the moderating effect of information processing methods on media effects.
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