Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression

Verbal aggression is increasingly prevalent online, especially so in social media and online gaming environments. These trends are worrying because despite occurring virtually, verbal aggression can cause psychological distress to victims in reality. It can also influence others to exhibit similar b...

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Main Author: Sng, Jeremy Rong Hui
Other Authors: Jung Younbo
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147854
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1478542023-03-05T16:23:45Z Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression Sng, Jeremy Rong Hui Jung Younbo Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information YBJung@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Communication Verbal aggression is increasingly prevalent online, especially so in social media and online gaming environments. These trends are worrying because despite occurring virtually, verbal aggression can cause psychological distress to victims in reality. It can also influence others to exhibit similar behavior, subsequently harming the general climate of discussion and perceptions of socially appropriate behavior. In the long run, this can reduce the quality of online interactions and mar the enjoyment of online experiences. The aim of this set of two studies is to untangle the complexities surrounding verbal aggression online, in the contexts of online commenting and online gaming. Currently, there is ample attention on research into external factors such as technological affordances (e.g., level of anonymity offered) and social norms, but there is less insight on intrapsychic factors explaining why verbal aggression occurs online. Study 1 and Two thus aim to fill this gap by integrating the notion of secondary goals by Dillard et al. (1989) with the Social Identity model of Deindividuation Effects (Reicher et al., 1995), to examine how varying conditions of anonymity and group identification with others can affect individuals’ internal concerns and motivations during the message crafting process to determine whether they send aggressive messages or not. Specifically, Study 1 (N = 90) demonstrated through an online experiment on online commenting behavior that verbal aggression was higher when group identification with other verbally aggressive individuals was high. Concern about identity goals and concern about communication management goals also moderated the effects of group identification on verbal aggression such that aggression was even greater when concern was low. This showed that in the context of online commenting, aggressive behavior is highly dependent on perceived norms and the behavior of others as well as the internal state of the person. Study 2 (N = 121) built upon this finding and sought to understand whether similar effects held up in a different context of sustained interaction over time: an online cooperative gaming context where participants shared a common fate with their assigned group of three players (one participant and two verbally aggressive confederates). It was found that contrary to Study 1, verbal aggression was higher when group identification with other verbally aggressive individuals was low. Concern about identity goals, concern about communication management goals, and concern about relational resource goals also moderated the effect of anonymity on verbal aggression such that aggression was even greater when concern was low. This further showed that concern about secondary goals is an important moderator to consider when examining online aggression. Overall, this dissertation has contributed theoretically to the literature on mediated communication by elucidating the psychological factors involved in and conditions leading to online aggressive behavior. Doctor of Philosophy 2021-04-14T04:45:31Z 2021-04-14T04:45:31Z 2020 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Sng, J. R. H. (2020). Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147854 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147854 10.32657/10356/147854 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication
Sng, Jeremy Rong Hui
Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
description Verbal aggression is increasingly prevalent online, especially so in social media and online gaming environments. These trends are worrying because despite occurring virtually, verbal aggression can cause psychological distress to victims in reality. It can also influence others to exhibit similar behavior, subsequently harming the general climate of discussion and perceptions of socially appropriate behavior. In the long run, this can reduce the quality of online interactions and mar the enjoyment of online experiences. The aim of this set of two studies is to untangle the complexities surrounding verbal aggression online, in the contexts of online commenting and online gaming. Currently, there is ample attention on research into external factors such as technological affordances (e.g., level of anonymity offered) and social norms, but there is less insight on intrapsychic factors explaining why verbal aggression occurs online. Study 1 and Two thus aim to fill this gap by integrating the notion of secondary goals by Dillard et al. (1989) with the Social Identity model of Deindividuation Effects (Reicher et al., 1995), to examine how varying conditions of anonymity and group identification with others can affect individuals’ internal concerns and motivations during the message crafting process to determine whether they send aggressive messages or not. Specifically, Study 1 (N = 90) demonstrated through an online experiment on online commenting behavior that verbal aggression was higher when group identification with other verbally aggressive individuals was high. Concern about identity goals and concern about communication management goals also moderated the effects of group identification on verbal aggression such that aggression was even greater when concern was low. This showed that in the context of online commenting, aggressive behavior is highly dependent on perceived norms and the behavior of others as well as the internal state of the person. Study 2 (N = 121) built upon this finding and sought to understand whether similar effects held up in a different context of sustained interaction over time: an online cooperative gaming context where participants shared a common fate with their assigned group of three players (one participant and two verbally aggressive confederates). It was found that contrary to Study 1, verbal aggression was higher when group identification with other verbally aggressive individuals was low. Concern about identity goals, concern about communication management goals, and concern about relational resource goals also moderated the effect of anonymity on verbal aggression such that aggression was even greater when concern was low. This further showed that concern about secondary goals is an important moderator to consider when examining online aggression. Overall, this dissertation has contributed theoretically to the literature on mediated communication by elucidating the psychological factors involved in and conditions leading to online aggressive behavior.
author2 Jung Younbo
author_facet Jung Younbo
Sng, Jeremy Rong Hui
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Sng, Jeremy Rong Hui
author_sort Sng, Jeremy Rong Hui
title Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
title_short Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
title_full Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
title_fullStr Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
title_full_unstemmed Examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
title_sort examining how anonymity, group identity, and secondary goals influence online verbal aggression
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147854
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