Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use
碩士 === 國立成功大學 === 國際經營管理研究所 === 103 === This study addresses the issue of online political participation regarding dissemination of political information on Facebook and Twitter. The objectives of this study are: 1) to investigate how people are motivated to disseminate political information on soci...
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ndltd-TW-103NCKU53210252019-05-15T21:59:10Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/ws5gw8 Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use ThitikaSirinimitwong 羅玉萍 碩士 國立成功大學 國際經營管理研究所 103 This study addresses the issue of online political participation regarding dissemination of political information on Facebook and Twitter. The objectives of this study are: 1) to investigate how people are motivated to disseminate political information on social network by trying to understand attitude, intention, and behavior of social network users. 2) To examine information characteristic and other factors that influence people to disseminate politic-related information online by analyzing from the actual behavior of posting and tweeting. Empirical studies were conducted to test the research model by using questionnaire survey and content analysis. This study extends Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) and Rumor Theory literatures by applying them to the context of political crisis. The result shows that factors influencing users to disseminate political information vary between Twitter and Facebook. Based on ELM, for Twitter, source credibility, or peripheral cue, didn’t influence users’ attitite toward information dissemination. But for Facebook, both central and peripheral routes affected the users’ attitude. From rumor theory perspective, anxiety and personal involvement didn’t significantly influence information dissemination on Twitter, but ambiguity, attractiveness, and partisanship did. For Facebook, only source ambiguity and personal involvement significant had a significant effect on the information dissemination. Chen Jeng Chung 陳正忠 2015 學位論文 ; thesis 115 en_US |
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碩士 === 國立成功大學 === 國際經營管理研究所 === 103 === This study addresses the issue of online political participation regarding dissemination of political information on Facebook and Twitter. The objectives of this study are: 1) to investigate how people are motivated to disseminate political information on social network by trying to understand attitude, intention, and behavior of social network users. 2) To examine information characteristic and other factors that influence people to disseminate politic-related information online by analyzing from the actual behavior of posting and tweeting. Empirical studies were conducted to test the research model by using questionnaire survey and content analysis. This study extends Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) and Rumor Theory literatures by applying them to the context of political crisis. The result shows that factors influencing users to disseminate political information vary between Twitter and Facebook. Based on ELM, for Twitter, source credibility, or peripheral cue, didn’t influence users’ attitite toward information dissemination. But for Facebook, both central and peripheral routes affected the users’ attitude. From rumor theory perspective, anxiety and personal involvement didn’t significantly influence information dissemination on Twitter, but ambiguity, attractiveness, and partisanship did. For Facebook, only source ambiguity and personal involvement significant had a significant effect on the information dissemination.
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author2 |
Chen Jeng Chung |
author_facet |
Chen Jeng Chung ThitikaSirinimitwong 羅玉萍 |
author |
ThitikaSirinimitwong 羅玉萍 |
spellingShingle |
ThitikaSirinimitwong 羅玉萍 Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use |
author_sort |
ThitikaSirinimitwong |
title |
Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use |
title_short |
Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use |
title_full |
Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use |
title_fullStr |
Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use |
title_full_unstemmed |
Online Community Participation on Political Information Dissemination during 2014 Thai Coup d’etat: Analyses of Facebook and Twitter Use |
title_sort |
online community participation on political information dissemination during 2014 thai coup d’etat: analyses of facebook and twitter use |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/ws5gw8 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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