Abstract
When laypersons are interested in science-related questions, they frequently visit participatory websites such as science blogs. Typically, articles on these sites are accompanied by user comments or ratings. The present research investigated the effects of different forms of user feedback on readers’ interpretation of science topics. In two experiments (N = 178), participants read a one-sided blog article about the dangers of violent video games. The visible user reactions contradicted the slant of the article and were systematically varied (argumentative comments vs. subjective comments vs. ratings vs. none). Results of Study 1 showed that parents (for whom the topic is relevant) made use of comments and ratings to infer the opinion climate, while there were only limited effects on readers’ attitudes. Less involved readers (student participants in Study 2), in contrast, were susceptible to the persuasive influence of user comments. Implications regarding the role of user reactions in online science communication are discussed.
©2016 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Scientific uncertainty in public discourse: How scientists, media and audiences present und process scientific evidence
- Communicating uncertainty in our mediated world: A preface
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- Who’s right: The author or the audience? Effects of user comments and ratings on the perception of online science articles
- Book Reviews
- Book Review
- Book Review
- Book Review
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Scientific uncertainty in public discourse: How scientists, media and audiences present und process scientific evidence
- Communicating uncertainty in our mediated world: A preface
- Articles
- Communicating scientific evidence: scientists’, journalists’ and audiences’ expectations and evaluations regarding the representation of scientific uncertainty
- Constructing an illusion of scientific uncertainty? Framing climate change in German and British print media
- Uncertainty discourses in the context of climate change: A corpus-assisted analysis of UK national newspaper articles
- Who participates in the climate change online discourse? A typology of Germans’ online engagement
- Who’s right: The author or the audience? Effects of user comments and ratings on the perception of online science articles
- Book Reviews
- Book Review
- Book Review
- Book Review