Education, Science, Technology, Innovation and Life
Open Access
Sign In

An Empirical Study on the Causes of College Students' Participation in Internet Public Opinion and Its Countermeasures—Based on Data from Colleges and Universities in Harbin

Download as PDF

DOI: 10.23977/mediacr.2024.050103 | Downloads: 13 | Views: 247

Author(s)

Feijia Chen 1, Zexiang Qin 1, Enbo Liu 1, Yuhe Bao 1, Kaiqi Guo 1, Lijian Zhou 1

Affiliation(s)

1 School of Finance and Public Administration, Harbin University of Commerce, Harbin, Heilongjiang, China

Corresponding Author

Lijian Zhou

ABSTRACT

With the rapid development of the we-media industry, network public opinion not only forms moral constraints on the public to a certain extent, but also the mixing of negative speeches and false information easily disturbs public hearing and hearing, thus threatening the physical and mental health of the public and impacting the ideological consciousness of netizens. In addition, college students are in the initial stage of socialization, and their rational judgment is easy to be interfered with, thus affecting the formation of college students' correct values. Therefore, this study makes an in-depth analysis of the connotation and characteristics of network public opinion, takes the students of Harbin university as the research object, collects data through questionnaire survey and interview survey, and analyzes it, so as to explore the motivation of college students to participate in network public opinion to a certain extent, and puts forward corresponding countermeasures for these specific reasons.

KEYWORDS

Internet Public Opinion, College Students, Questionnaire, Empirical Analysis, Interview, In-Depth Motivation, Countermeasures

CITE THIS PAPER

Feijia Chen, Zexiang Qin, Enbo Liu, Yuhe Bao, Kaiqi Guo, Lijian Zhou, An Empirical Study on the Causes of College Students' Participation in Internet Public Opinion and Its Countermeasures—Based on Data from Colleges and Universities in Harbin. Media and Communication Research (2024) Vol. 5: 16-25. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/mediacr.2024.050103.

REFERENCES

[1] Huang Kexin. Research on network public opinion governance of Public security organs. Network Security Technology and Application, 2022(5):163-164. (in Chinese) DOI:10.3969/j.issn.1009-6833.2022.05.096.
[2] Tang Tingting. Review of research on network public opinion in universities. Industry & Science Forum, 2022, 21(17):59-60. (in Chinese) DOI:10.3969/j.issn.1673-5641.2022.17.026.
[3] Shao Deqi, Feng Chao, Wang Liping. A study on the influence of Network Public Opinion on Public policy. Journal of Anhui Normal University, 2022,45(5):409-414. DOI:10.14182/J.cnki.1001-2443.2022.05.001.
[4] Coombs W T, Holladay S J. Further explorations of post-crisis communication: Effects of media and response strategies on perceptions and intentions. Public Relations Review, 2008, 35(1) : 1-6.
[5] Zhang L, Wei J, Boncella R J. Emotional communication analysis of emergency microblog based on the evolution life cycle of public opinion. Information Discovery and Delivery, 2020, 48(3): 151-163.
[6] Li S, Liu Z, Li Y. Temporal and spatial evolution of online public sentiment on emergencies. Information Processing & Management, 2020, 57(2):102177.
[7] Qazi A, Qazi J, Naseer K, et al. Analyzing situational awareness through public opinion to predict adoption of social distancing amid pandemic COVID-19. Journal of Medical Virology, 2020, 92(7):849-855.
[8] Kowalski R M, Giumetti G W, Schroeder A N, & Lattanner M R. Bullying in the Digital Age: A Critical Review and Meta-Analysis of Cyberbullying Research Among Youth. Psychological Bulletin, 2014(04):1073-1137.
[9] Simmons J, Bauman S, Ives J. Cyber-aggression among members of college fraternities and sororities in the United States. I. In Bullying among University Students: Cross-National Perspectives; Routledge: London, UK, 2016, 93-109.
[10] Chang Q S, Xing J L. Cyberbullying and suicide ideation among Hong Kong adolescents: The mitigating effects of life satisfaction with family, classmates and academic results. Psychiatry Research, 2019, 274:269-273.
[11] Chen Kun, Lian Ruirui. Research on the Social Network in the Field of Public Crisis Management. Basic & Clinicalpharmacology & Toxicology, 2020.1 26.
[12] Lin F, Zhu X, Shao X, et al. Modeling and quantifying the influence of opinion involving opinion leaders on delay ed information propagation dynamics. Applied Mathematics Letters, 2021, 121: 107356.
[13] Arthur Atanesyan, Anahit Hakobyan, Bradley Reynolds.Com municating COVID-19 on Social Media: The Effects of the Spiral of Silence. The Russian Sociological Review, 2019, 20(4).

All published work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Copyright © 2016 - 2031 Clausius Scientific Press Inc. All Rights Reserved.