Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.

Harmful and inappropriate online content is prevalent, necessitating the need to understand how individuals judge and wish to mitigate the spread of negative content on social media. In an online study with a diverse sample of social media users (n = 294), we sought to elucidate factors that influen...

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Main Authors: Sarah Vahed, Catalina Goanta, Pietro Ortolani, Alan G Sanfey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0300960&type=printable
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author Sarah Vahed
Catalina Goanta
Pietro Ortolani
Alan G Sanfey
author_facet Sarah Vahed
Catalina Goanta
Pietro Ortolani
Alan G Sanfey
author_sort Sarah Vahed
collection DOAJ
description Harmful and inappropriate online content is prevalent, necessitating the need to understand how individuals judge and wish to mitigate the spread of negative content on social media. In an online study with a diverse sample of social media users (n = 294), we sought to elucidate factors that influence individuals' evaluation of objectionable online content. Participants were presented with images varying in moral valence, each accompanied by an indicator of intention from an ostensible content poster. Half of the participants were assigned the role of user content moderator, while the remaining participants were instructed to respond as they normally would online. The study aimed to establish whether moral imagery, the intention of a content poster, and the perceived responsibility of social media users, affect judgments of objectionability, operationalized through both decisions to flag content and preferences to seek punishment of other users. Our findings reveal that moral imagery strongly influences users' assessments of what is appropriate online content, with participants almost exclusively choosing to report and punish morally negative images. Poster intention also plays a significant role in user's decisions, with greater objection shown to morally negative content when it has been shared by another user for the purpose of showing support for it. Bestowing a content moderation role affected reporting behaviour but not punishment preferences. We also explore individual user characteristics, finding a negative association between trust in social media platforms and reporting decisions. Conversely, a positive relationship was identified between trait empathy and reporting rates. Collectively, our insights highlight the complexity of social media users' moderation decisions and preferences. The results advance understanding of moral judgments and punishment preferences online, and offer insights for platforms and regulatory bodies aiming to better understand social media users' role in content moderation.
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spelling doaj.art-3219c9936ccc4fb9853ef56ed8e00ae42024-03-29T05:32:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-01193e030096010.1371/journal.pone.0300960Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.Sarah VahedCatalina GoantaPietro OrtolaniAlan G SanfeyHarmful and inappropriate online content is prevalent, necessitating the need to understand how individuals judge and wish to mitigate the spread of negative content on social media. In an online study with a diverse sample of social media users (n = 294), we sought to elucidate factors that influence individuals' evaluation of objectionable online content. Participants were presented with images varying in moral valence, each accompanied by an indicator of intention from an ostensible content poster. Half of the participants were assigned the role of user content moderator, while the remaining participants were instructed to respond as they normally would online. The study aimed to establish whether moral imagery, the intention of a content poster, and the perceived responsibility of social media users, affect judgments of objectionability, operationalized through both decisions to flag content and preferences to seek punishment of other users. Our findings reveal that moral imagery strongly influences users' assessments of what is appropriate online content, with participants almost exclusively choosing to report and punish morally negative images. Poster intention also plays a significant role in user's decisions, with greater objection shown to morally negative content when it has been shared by another user for the purpose of showing support for it. Bestowing a content moderation role affected reporting behaviour but not punishment preferences. We also explore individual user characteristics, finding a negative association between trust in social media platforms and reporting decisions. Conversely, a positive relationship was identified between trait empathy and reporting rates. Collectively, our insights highlight the complexity of social media users' moderation decisions and preferences. The results advance understanding of moral judgments and punishment preferences online, and offer insights for platforms and regulatory bodies aiming to better understand social media users' role in content moderation.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0300960&type=printable
spellingShingle Sarah Vahed
Catalina Goanta
Pietro Ortolani
Alan G Sanfey
Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.
PLoS ONE
title Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.
title_full Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.
title_fullStr Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.
title_full_unstemmed Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.
title_short Moral judgment of objectionable online content: Reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media.
title_sort moral judgment of objectionable online content reporting decisions and punishment preferences on social media
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0300960&type=printable
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AT alangsanfey moraljudgmentofobjectionableonlinecontentreportingdecisionsandpunishmentpreferencesonsocialmedia