Competing Frames and Melodrama: The Effects of Facebook Posts on Policy Preferences about COVID-19

Valenzuela, Sebastian; Bachmann, Ingrid; Mujica, Constanza; Grassau, Daniela; Labarca, Claudia; Halpern, Daniel; Puente, Soledad

Abstract

The tension between health and economic considerations regarding COVID-19 has resulted in a framing contest, in which proponents and adversaries of strong containment measures hold oppositional frames about the pandemic. This study examines the effects of competing news frames on social media users' policy preferences and the moderation of framing effects played by melodramatic news treatment. Results from a pre-registered online survey experiment in Chile (N= 518) show that participants exposed to Facebook posts with an economic frame were significantly less supportive of measures that restrict mobility (e.g., quarantines) than participants in the control group. Contrary to expectations, exposure to a public health frame also reduced support for stay-at-home orders, and the presence of melodramatic features had no significant impact on users' preferences. Other variables, however, did alter these framing effects, such as fear of COVID-19 and frequency of social media news use. These findings paint a rather complex picture of framing effects during the pandemic in a digital media environment.

Más información

Título según WOS: Competing Frames and Melodrama: The Effects of Facebook Posts on Policy Preferences about COVID-19
Título de la Revista: Digital Journalism
Volumen: 9
Número: 9
Editorial: ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 1296
Página final: 1315
DOI:

10.1080/21670811.2021.1943479

Notas: ISI