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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Hdfs Spring 2023 Newsletter, Raeann Hamon
Hdfs Spring 2023 Newsletter, Raeann Hamon
Human Development and Family Science Student Work
Annual spring newsletter created by the Human Development and Family Science Department. Student, faculty, and alumni updates.
- Reflections from Paul Johns
- Luke Miller- Outstanding Alumni Recipient
- "Welcome Back" and Christmas parties
- Textile Arts Course Review
- MCFR Valentine's event
- MCFR Sending Smiles to Kid Patients Event
- Conference Bound
- Scholarship Endowment Letter: A Thank You
- Child Life Focus
- Learning from the Elders - in GERO 231
- Poverty simulation
- Did You Know?
- 2022-2023 Graduates
Researching How Excess Social Media Use And Filters Affect Trust, Ula J. Mccarthy
Researching How Excess Social Media Use And Filters Affect Trust, Ula J. Mccarthy
Honors Undergraduate Theses
In the present day, excessive social media use has become synonymous with the younger generation. Prolonged social media interaction has resulted in new terminology describing the compulsive need for internet and social media use: internet addiction. This is a new term, and while it has not been defined as a clinical addiction used in acute care settings (Zahrai et al., 2022), it is important to understand its symptoms, like excessive social media use. Given the rapid speed of social media integration in modern society, it is important to investigate how excessive social media use (ESMU), as defined by Zahrai et …
Partisan Selective Exposure On Social Media During The 2020 Presidential Election, Grayce Lemon
Partisan Selective Exposure On Social Media During The 2020 Presidential Election, Grayce Lemon
All Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects
This study examines selective exposure and selective avoidance on social media during the 2020 presidential election. 147 voters participated in the survey conducted using Qualtrics. The purpose of this study was to understand whether selective exposure and avoidance behaviors differed based on voting outcome (Trump or Biden), and to test whether political ideological polarization was reflected in news consumption through social media. Taken together, the results indicate that although both voting bases engaged in selective exposure and avoidance, the propensity was the same between Trump and Biden voters. Additionally, results confirm existing hypotheses that the strength of political ideology positively …