• About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
Epaper
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
No Result
View All Result
Home OTHER VIEW

What makes us share posts on social media?

KI News by KI News
March 14, 2024
in OTHER VIEW
A A
0
Social Media and its effects on children
FacebookTwitterWhatsapp

By: Sheikh Aqib Farooq,

The average internet user spends nearly three hours a day using social media. It’s clear that social media is becoming increasingly crucial to sharing important information with the public — like how to stay safe from COVID-19, for example — and researchers want to know what makes a piece of media compelling enough for people to share it online.

More News

The Subtle Architecture of Enduring Prosperity

Counting Wealth Beyond Coins!

Machiavelli’s Ruthless Legacy in Global Power Politics

Load More

A new study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Generalled by University of Pennsylvania researchers Danielle Cosme and Emily Falk analyzed the behavior of more than 3,000 individuals to explore the psychology behind sharing information online.

It turns out that the answer is quite straightforward: People share information that they feel is meaningful to themselves or to the people they know.

Cosme and her team test what contributes to “value-based virality” — essentially that information on the internet can go viral because people find it inherently valuable, either to themselves or to society.

This finding is key to crafting effective messaging for social causes, says Cosme, a research director at the Annenberg School for Communication’s Communication Neuroscience Lab.

Knowing the psychological ingredients that make a person share a post on social media can help scientists share facts about climate change or public health officials dispel myths about vaccines.

Cosme’s research shows that people pay more attention to information they perceive to be related to themselves.

Similarly, humans are social beings and love to connect with each other.

Sharing information activates reward centers in our brain. And when we communicate with others, we consider what the other person is thinking or wants to hear — a quality known as social relevance.

For Cosme’s study, participants were exposed to articles and social media posts about health, climate change, voting, and COVID-19. Some participants read headlines and summaries of news articles, others looked at social media posts.

All of the participants rated how likely they were to share each message and how relevant they found each one to themselves and to people they know.

The researchers found that no matter the topic covered or the medium of the message, people were most likely to say they’d share messages that they perceived as self- or socially relevant.

Further, they found that when participants were asked to explicitly write out why a message was relevant to themselves or people they know, they were even more likely to share it than when they just reflected on the topic.

“Sharing information is a critical component of individual and collective action,” Cosme says.

“At the beginning of the pandemic, we needed to quickly spread accurate information about what was going on, how to protect ourselves, how to protect each other. Information spreading within social networks can be really impactful for changing our individual behavior, and also changing our collective behavior through shifting our perceptions of what’s normative.”

With data on tens of thousands of messages, Cosme and her colleagues at the Communication Neuroscience Lab believe this finding can help shape effective public messaging on social media.

“We’re interested in understanding how we can translate psychological theory into real-world interventions to try to promote behavior change,” Cosme says.

One way to improve content sharing is to recruit people who find the content self- or socially relevant to share messages online.

Another is to frame messages to be seen as more self- or socially relevant by audiences without tailoring the messages themselves.

“We developed message frames that could be paired with existing news and social media posts,” says Falk, the study’s senior author.

“This means that the same prompts that worked in this study could be tested easily in other contexts as well.”

The Communication Neuroscience Lab is continuing this research by looking at brain activity in relation to social media sharing.

For these studies, the researchers are using fMRI scanners to understand how specific regions of the brain shape perceptions of self and social relevance.

Overall, the team hopes that the results of the study will give those wanting to create social change the tools to do so effectively.

“Big issues require collective action,” Cosme says. And spreading accurate information empowers individuals to join together and act.

“This study highlights key psychological ingredients that motivate people to share information about topics that impact our well-being,” Falk says. “Sharing is one key lever for shifting cultural norms and motivating larger scale action, so it’s really important to understand what makes it happen.”

The writer is experienced in the realms of skill development, civil service training and insightful commentary.

Previous Post

‘Uniting for a Glaucoma Free World’

Next Post

RECONNECTING WITH LORD

KI News

KI News

Kashmir Images is an English language daily newspaper published from Srinagar (J&K), India. The newspaper is one of the largest circulated English dailies of Kashmir and its hard copies reach every nook and corner of Kashmir Valley besides Jammu and Ladakh region.

Related Posts

The Subtle Architecture of Enduring Prosperity

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
April 16, 2026

Prosperity rarely begins where it is most visible. Expanding cities, rising incomes, and growing industries are the outward signs of...

Read moreDetails

Counting Wealth Beyond Coins!

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
April 15, 2026

In common global usage, the terms “wealth” and “poverty” are often understood as being closely linked to money and material...

Read moreDetails

Machiavelli’s Ruthless Legacy in Global Power Politics

INDIA bloc leaders sound poll bugle at Patna rally
April 14, 2026

Niccolo Machiavelli’s The Prince, written in 1513, remains the most uncompromising treatise on power, a text that dismantled the moral...

Read moreDetails

The Scary Beauty of Old Age: A Reflection on Youth, Wisdom, and Legacy

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
April 14, 2026

Old age has always been one of the most adventurous and haunting visualizations of human life. To imagine oneself in...

Read moreDetails

When Education Teaches Adjustment, Why Choose Hatred?

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
April 13, 2026

Humanity has reached extraordinary heights in science, technology, communication, and education. Never have people been so informed, so connected, and...

Read moreDetails

Like many, I too share a very close bond with my mother

INDIA bloc leaders sound poll bugle at Patna rally
April 12, 2026

As we spread awareness on this day about the importance of proper health care and nutrition for pregnant women and...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
‘Ask your employees not to offer namaz in parks’: Noida Police issue notice to companies

RECONNECTING WITH LORD

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
E-Mailus: kashmirimages123@gmail.com

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.