4.2 Article

Incivility Online: Affective and Behavioral Reactions to Uncivil Political Posts in a Web-based Experiment

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & POLITICS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 167-185

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/19331681.2014.997416

Keywords

Affective intelligence; incivility; online discourse; political deliberation; political discourse

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With the advances in interpersonal communication of the Web 2.0 era, questions about the importance of civility are perhaps more important than ever. Mass digital interaction between strangers has become an everyday occurrence, bound by few behavioral norms. I argue that the widespread presence of incivility in online political communication limits the deliberative potential of online interactions. To test this hypothesis, I manipulate exposure to uncivil political discourse in an online discussion forum. I find that exposure to disagreeable uncivil political talk induces feelings of anger and aversion, which in turn reduces satisfaction with the message board discourse. On the other hand, exposure to like-minded incivility increases the use of uncivil behavior in political comments by message board posters. Notably, these effects mainly occur when histrionic, emotional incivility is present. I discuss why like-minded and disagreeable incivility have different effects, and reflect on what the presence of incivility means for online political discourse.

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