Skip to content
University of Georgia
Grady School of Journalism
Prospective StudentsGiveCurrent Students
Open Site Navigation
Close Site Navigation
AcademicsFaculty, Staff and Ph.D. Students
Student ShowcaseCenters & InstitutesNewsResearchAlumni & FriendsGrady Events
OutreachAbout GradyPeabody Awards
Prospective Students Give Current Students Academics Research Outreach Faculty Student Showcase Centers, Institutes & Affiliates News Alumni & Friends Grady Events Grady Peabody Awards
Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube LinkedIn Pinterest Flickr
120 Hooper Street, Athens, Georgia, 30602-3018 (706) 542-1704

Topic: social-mediated crisis situations

Information Vetting as a Key Component in Social-Mediated Crisis Communication: An Exploratory Study to Examine the Initial conceptualization

Abstract: In order to understand publics’ crisis information consumption in an increasingly competitive and conflicting media environment, this study addresses how and why individuals vet information (or not) in social-mediated crisis situations. Built upon the social-mediated crisis communication (SMCC) model as well as grounded in the elaboration likelihood model and the meta-cognition theory, this study proposes an initial conceptual framework of crisis information vetting. An exploratory study, including four focus groups and 13 in-depth interviews, was conducted to investigate: 1) indicators of information vetting behavior according to participants’ self-reported experiences; and 2) what motivate and what prohibit participants from engaging themselves emotionally and cognitively in the process of crisis information vetting. Our qualitative data provide evidences for a two-step process of crisis information vetting, namely, primary vetting and secondary vetting. The 14 sub-constructs and 48 vetting behavior indicators rendered may serve in future scale development and further conceptual model refinement of the new crisis information vetting construct. By connecting publics’ crisis information consumption with their crisis information transmission in social-mediated crisis communication, this study also extends and enriches the SMCC model.

Home Apply Contact Give Careers Business Office
Grady College
Grady College of Journalism & Mass Communication
120 Hooper Street
Athens, Georgia, 30602-3018
(706) 542-1704
Contact Grady
Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube LinkedIn Pinterest Flickr
UGA Privacy PolicyUGA Consumer InformationGrady Diversity PolicyGrady Text Only VersionSitemap
University of Georgia
  • Schools and Colleges
  • Directory
  • MyUGA
  • Employment Opportunities
  • Copyright and Trademarks
  • Privacy
#UGA on
© University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602
706‑542‑3000