2022
DOI: 10.1002/isd2.12251
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Are citizens engaging with government social media Covid 19 pandemic information? Why media richness and dialogic loop features matter

Abstract: This study investigated the extent to which media richness, dialogic loop, and content type affect citizen engagement with local government social media information on the Covid‐19 pandemic. Quantitative content analysis through scraping of Facebook posts by the local government was employed in this study. Effects of the determinant variables was tested using negative binomial regression. Results show that both media richness and dialogic loop have significant and positive effects on citizens' engagement. This… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…These results align with previous studies on platforms like Sina Weibo and Twitter during COVID-19, suggesting that richer media, including links, photos, and videos, is associated with reduced engagement (Alhassan & AlDossary, 2021;Chen et al, 2020). This contrasts with prior findings indicating richer media leads to higher engagement on Facebook during the pandemic (Amores et al, 2022). Our findings contribute to the ongoing discussion on media richness and engagement, emphasizing the need for further exploration, especially during crises when individuals may prefer text posts over visuals (Chen et al, 2020;Paul & Das, 2022).…”
Section: Principal Findingssupporting
confidence: 86%
“…These results align with previous studies on platforms like Sina Weibo and Twitter during COVID-19, suggesting that richer media, including links, photos, and videos, is associated with reduced engagement (Alhassan & AlDossary, 2021;Chen et al, 2020). This contrasts with prior findings indicating richer media leads to higher engagement on Facebook during the pandemic (Amores et al, 2022). Our findings contribute to the ongoing discussion on media richness and engagement, emphasizing the need for further exploration, especially during crises when individuals may prefer text posts over visuals (Chen et al, 2020;Paul & Das, 2022).…”
Section: Principal Findingssupporting
confidence: 86%