2020
DOI: 10.1080/0144929x.2020.1742380
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Asymmetrical third-person effects on the perceptions of online risk and harm among adolescents and adults

Abstract: Although research has identified a range of opportunities, risks, and harms related to online social networking, the public debate on online risks follows a set pattern by which members of older age groups (parents, regulators) hold a picture of members of younger age groups (teenagers, digital natives) at a uniformly high level of risk. Perceptions of online risk, however, are prone to third-person effects in which individuals perceive risks to be more apparent in others than themselves. This study investigat… Show more

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