Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making
Judgment making about targets in information-abundant environments involve another level of judgement processes to sort out relevant and trustworthy information about the targets of judgment. We call this second-order judgment problems. The present study formulated second-order judgement problems in...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1465992023-03-05T15:56:37Z Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making Park, Mina Oh, Poong Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information 2018 International Communication Association Conference Social sciences::Communication Judgment Making Social Distance Judgment making about targets in information-abundant environments involve another level of judgement processes to sort out relevant and trustworthy information about the targets of judgment. We call this second-order judgment problems. The present study formulated second-order judgement problems into a theoretical model that focuses on the impacts of perceived social distance between a target and the informant who provides the information about the target on judgement formation processes. A set of hypotheses were developed and tested through a web-administrated experiment, in which participants were asked to make judgments in a hypothetical criminal incidence based on the information provided by multiple sources. The results suggested that perceived distance between targets and information sources had positive effects on trustworthiness of information as well as final judgment. However, the effects were found nonlinear, suggesting the possibility of compounded effects. This paper concluded with discussion of the implications of the current findings. Accepted version 2021-03-02T07:44:02Z 2021-03-02T07:44:02Z 2018 Conference Paper Park, M., & Oh, P. (2018). Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making. International Communication Association Conference 2018. https://www.icahdq.org/page/PastFuture https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146599 en © 2018 The Author(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Communication Judgment Making Social Distance Park, Mina Oh, Poong Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
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Judgment making about targets in information-abundant environments involve another level of judgement processes to sort out relevant and trustworthy information about the targets of judgment. We call this second-order judgment problems. The present study formulated second-order judgement problems into a theoretical model that focuses on the impacts of perceived social distance between a target and the informant who provides the information about the target on judgement formation processes. A set of hypotheses were developed and tested through a web-administrated experiment, in which participants were asked to make judgments in a hypothetical criminal incidence based on the information provided by multiple sources. The results suggested that perceived distance between targets and information sources had positive effects on trustworthiness of information as well as final judgment. However, the effects were found nonlinear, suggesting the possibility of compounded effects. This paper concluded with discussion of the implications of the current findings. |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Park, Mina Oh, Poong |
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Conference or Workshop Item |
author |
Park, Mina Oh, Poong |
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Park, Mina |
title |
Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
title_short |
Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
title_full |
Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
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Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
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Second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
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second-order judgment problems : the impacts of perceived social distance on judgment making |
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2021 |
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https://www.icahdq.org/page/PastFuture https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146599 |
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