Who's posting facebook faux pas? A cross-cultural examination of personality differences

Authors Karl, Peluchette, Schlaegel
Journal International Journal of Selection and Assessment
Year 2010
Type Published Paper
Abstract This study examines culture and personality differences in student reports of the likelihood that they would post various types of information on their Facebook profiles. As predicted those high on conscientiousness, agreeableness, and emotional stability proved significantly less likely to report posting problematic content (e.g., substance abuse, sexual content) on their profile. Those who scored high on Compulsive Internet Use indicated a greater likelihood to post such profile information. Consistent with our expectations, our cross-cultural analysis revealed that US students were more inclined than German students to post problematic information to their Facebook site. Implications of these results and recommendations for future research are discussed.
URL https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2389.2010.00499.x
Tags Experimental / Survey-Based Empirical  |   Media and Textual Analysis

The effect of word of mouth on sales: Online book reviews

Authors Chevalier, Mayzlin
Journal Journal of Marketing Research
Year 2006
Type Published Paper
Abstract The authors examine the effect of consumer reviews on relative sales of books at Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com. The authors find that (1) reviews are overwhelmingly positive at both sites, but there are more reviews and longer reviews at Amazon.com; (2) an improvement in a book's reviews leads to an increase in relative sales at that site; (3) for most samples in the study, the impact of one-star reviews is greater than the impact of five-star reviews; and (4) evidence from review-length data suggests that customers read review text rather than relying only on summary statistics.
Keywords Earnings conference calls, investment decisions, nonnative accents, impressions of CEOs
URL https://doi.org/10.1509/jmkr.43.3.345
Tags Archival Empirical  |   Consumer Decisions  |   Media and Textual Analysis

Negativity bias, negativity dominance, and contagion

Authors Rozin, Royzman
Journal Personality and Social Psychology Review
Year 2001
Type Published Paper
Abstract We hypothesize that there is a general bias, based on both innatepredispositions and experience, in animals and humans, to give greater weight to negative entities (e.g., events, objects, personal traits). This is manifested in 4 ways: (a) negative potency (negative entities are stronger than the equivalent positive entities), (b) steeper negative gradients (the negativity of negative events grows more rapidly with approach to them in space or time than does the positivity of positive events, (c) negativity dominance (combinations of negative and positive entities yield evaluations that are more negative than the algebraic sum of individual subjective valences would predict), and (d) negative differentiation (negative entities are more varied, yield more complex conceptual representations, and engage a wider response repertoire). We review evidence for this taxonomy, with emphasis on negativity dominance, including literary, historical, religious, and cultural sources, as well as the psychological literatures on learning, attention, impression formation, contagion, moral judgment, development, and memory. We then consider a variety of theoretical accounts for negativity bias. We suggest that 1 feature of negative events that make them dominant is that negative entities are more contagious than positive entities.
URL https://doi.org/10.1207/S15327957PSPR0504_2
Tags Archival Empirical  |   Experimental / Survey-Based Empirical  |   Media and Textual Analysis  |   Social Transmission Biases

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