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Keywords = media terrorism

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25 pages, 1500 KB  
Article
How Personality Shapes Emotional Reactions to Explicit, Implicit, and Positive Media Images of Terror? An Experimental Investigation
by Tal Morse, Avi Besser and Virgil Zeigler-Hill
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(10), 1581; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101581 - 17 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1227
Abstract
This study investigates the public health consequences of media exposure to terrorism by examining individuals’ emotional responses to photographs from the October 7th terror attack, assessing how such imagery interacts with personality traits to influence emotional states. The research aims to explore how [...] Read more.
This study investigates the public health consequences of media exposure to terrorism by examining individuals’ emotional responses to photographs from the October 7th terror attack, assessing how such imagery interacts with personality traits to influence emotional states. The research aims to explore how these reactions are moderated by personality traits—specifically the Big Five. A diverse sample comprising Israeli Jews (final sample N = 826) viewed media-sourced images categorized as explicit negative (n = 279; e.g., photos of bodies or deceased individuals), implicit negative (n = 269; images depicting destruction and devastation without explicit death symbols), and positive (n = 278; images of reconstruction and renewal). Participants’ affective states and specific emotions were assessed both before and after exposure to capture potential shifts. Results revealed a significant increase in negative emotions and a corresponding decrease in positive emotions following exposure to negative images. Personality traits moderated these emotional responses in nuanced ways. Neuroticism exacerbated negative emotional reactions, particularly among men exposed to implicit negative imagery, likely reflecting heightened sensitivity to ambiguous threats. Similarly, agreeableness was associated with heightened anger responses—specifically among men exposed to implicit negative imagery and women exposed to explicit negative images—although this effect was limited to anger and did not extend to other negative emotions. In contrast, openness was linked to decreased anger but only for men exposed to implicit negative imagery. Together, these findings underscore the complex interplay between media exposure, personality traits, and emotional responses to terror-related content. From a public health perspective, the results highlight the need for the following: (a) targeted mental health interventions that account for personality-based vulnerabilities, (b) responsible media reporting practices that minimize unnecessary harm, and (c) media literacy initiatives that empower individuals to manage exposure to distressing content. By linking personality, media imagery, and emotional outcomes, this study provides actionable insights for strengthening resilience, guiding ethical media practices, and promoting psychological well-being in communities affected by terrorism. Full article
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16 pages, 255 KB  
Article
Hamas’s Hostage Videos as a Tool of Strategic Communication
by Moran Yarchi
Journal. Media 2025, 6(4), 180; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia6040180 - 17 Oct 2025
Viewed by 2533
Abstract
Terror organizations increasingly utilize the media and especially digital platforms to disseminate strategic messages, particularly during conflicts. This study examines how Hamas employed hostage videos and other related publications as a form of strategic communication during the first 20 months of the 2023–2025 [...] Read more.
Terror organizations increasingly utilize the media and especially digital platforms to disseminate strategic messages, particularly during conflicts. This study examines how Hamas employed hostage videos and other related publications as a form of strategic communication during the first 20 months of the 2023–2025 war with Israel. Drawing on qualitative content analysis of 166 media outputs published on Hamas’s official Telegram channel, including videos, infographics, and a few text-based posts, the study identifies five distinct genres: proof of life, revealing the hostages’ fate, rage or call for help, messages to hostage families or the Israeli public, and hostage release videos. Each genre reflects a specific communicative strategy, varying in tone, target audience, emotional appeal, and timing. The findings reveal that Hamas’s media operations are characterized by a high degree of intentionality, with different genres employed to advance political objectives, ranging from negotiation pressure and public mobilization to projecting legitimacy and resilience. The study contributes to the growing literature on terrorism and strategic communication, illustrating how non-state actors leverage visual media and emotional narratives to wage parallel battles over image, perception, and legitimacy. Full article
22 pages, 1579 KB  
Article
Stance Detection in Arabic Tweets: A Machine Learning Framework for Identifying Extremist Discourse
by Arwa K. Alkhraiji and Aqil M. Azmi
Mathematics 2025, 13(18), 2965; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13182965 - 13 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1512
Abstract
Terrorism remains a critical global challenge, and the proliferation of social media has created new avenues for monitoring extremist discourse. This study investigates stance detection as a method to identify Arabic tweets expressing support for or opposition to specific organizations associated with extremist [...] Read more.
Terrorism remains a critical global challenge, and the proliferation of social media has created new avenues for monitoring extremist discourse. This study investigates stance detection as a method to identify Arabic tweets expressing support for or opposition to specific organizations associated with extremist activities, using Hezbollah as a case study. Thousands of relevant Arabic tweets were collected and manually annotated by expert annotators. After extensive preprocessing and feature extraction using term frequency–inverse document frequency (tf-idf), we implemented traditional machine learning (ML) classifiers—Support Vector Machines (SVMs) with multiple kernels, Multinomial Naïve Bayes, and Weighted K-Nearest Neighbors. ML models were selected over deep learning (DL) approaches due to (1) limited annotated Arabic data availability for effective DL training; (2) computational efficiency for resource-constrained environments; and (3) the critical need for interpretability in counterterrorism applications. While interpretability is not a core focus of this work, the use of traditional ML models (rather than DL) makes the system inherently more transparent and readily adaptable for future integration of interpretability techniques. Comparative experiments using FastText word embeddings and tf-idf with supervised classifiers revealed superior performance with the latter approach. Our best result achieved a macro F-score of 78.62% using SVMs with the RBF kernel, demonstrating that interpretable ML frameworks offer a viable and resource-efficient approach for monitoring extremist discourse in Arabic social media. These findings highlight the potential of such frameworks to support scalable and explainable counterterrorism tools in low-resource linguistic settings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Machine Learning Theory and Applications)
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33 pages, 11250 KB  
Article
RADAR#: An Ensemble Approach for Radicalization Detection in Arabic Social Media Using Hybrid Deep Learning and Transformer Models
by Emad M. Al-Shawakfa, Anas M. R. Alsobeh, Sahar Omari and Amani Shatnawi
Information 2025, 16(7), 522; https://doi.org/10.3390/info16070522 - 22 Jun 2025
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2114
Abstract
The recent increase in extremist material on social media platforms makes serious countermeasures to international cybersecurity and national security efforts more difficult. RADAR#, a deep ensemble approach for the detection of radicalization in Arabic tweets, is introduced in this paper. Our model combines [...] Read more.
The recent increase in extremist material on social media platforms makes serious countermeasures to international cybersecurity and national security efforts more difficult. RADAR#, a deep ensemble approach for the detection of radicalization in Arabic tweets, is introduced in this paper. Our model combines a hybrid CNN-Bi-LSTM framework with a top Arabic transformer model (AraBERT) through a weighted ensemble strategy. We employ domain-specific Arabic tweet pre-processing techniques and a custom attention layer to better focus on radicalization indicators. Experiments over a 89,816 Arabic tweet dataset indicate that RADAR# reaches 98% accuracy and a 97% F1-score, surpassing advanced approaches. The ensemble strategy is particularly beneficial in handling dialectical variations and context-sensitive words common in Arabic social media updates. We provide a full performance analysis of the model, including ablation studies and attention visualization for better interpretability. Our contribution is useful to the cybersecurity community through an effective early detection mechanism of online radicalization in Arabic language content, which can be potentially applied in counter-terrorism and online content moderation. Full article
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16 pages, 422 KB  
Article
Media and Islamophobia in Europe: A Literature-Based Analysis of Reports 2015–2023
by Jelang Ramadhan, Karomah Widianingsih, Eva Achjani Zulfa and Imam Khomaeini Hayatullah
Religions 2025, 16(5), 584; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050584 - 1 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 13597
Abstract
This study examines the increasing Muslim presence in Western Europe, driven by migration, fertility rates, and religious conversion according to recent demographic research. Triggering events such as the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and the 7/7 London bombings in 2005, marked as milestones, worsened [...] Read more.
This study examines the increasing Muslim presence in Western Europe, driven by migration, fertility rates, and religious conversion according to recent demographic research. Triggering events such as the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and the 7/7 London bombings in 2005, marked as milestones, worsened by the global media and propaganda, have significantly fueled Islamophobia across the region. Countries in Western Europe, like Spain, the Netherlands, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom, are selected focus areas to reflect social change and overlapping responses to the shifts. This study investigates the connection between rising anti-immigrant sentiment toward Muslims and the media’s role in shaping Islamophobia by negatively depicting Islam as a religion of war or terror. By analyzing the European Islamophobia Reports from 2015 to 2023, this study examines how Muslims are portrayed both as immigrants and through their symbolic societal presence. The study critically analyzes anti-Islam propaganda and the life experiences of Muslim communities by implementing qualitative methods through a literature review. The findings of this study reveal a paradox between Europe’s advocacy for diversity and the realities shaped by political and global dynamics, which hinder efforts toward inclusion. These insights could inform media policies to promote more balanced representations of Muslims and guide societal initiatives aimed at reducing prejudice and fostering greater inclusivity in Western Europe. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion and Immigrants in Western Europe)
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21 pages, 6581 KB  
Article
Ecuador: A State of Violence—Live Broadcast of Terror
by Fernanda Tusa, Ignacio Aguaded, Santiago Tejedor and Cristhian Rivera
Journal. Media 2025, 6(2), 56; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia6020056 - 11 Apr 2025
Viewed by 2025
Abstract
This article examines the audiovisual representation of violence during the armed takeover of the Ecuadorian television channel TC Television on 9 January 2024, an unprecedented event in the country’s recent media history. Employing a film analysis methodology, the study deconstructs the live broadcast [...] Read more.
This article examines the audiovisual representation of violence during the armed takeover of the Ecuadorian television channel TC Television on 9 January 2024, an unprecedented event in the country’s recent media history. Employing a film analysis methodology, the study deconstructs the live broadcast by segmenting it into visual sequences and analyzing elements such as narrative content, shot composition, camera movement, sound design, and editing techniques. The interpretive phase includes narratological, iconic, and psychoanalytic readings. From a psychoanalytic perspective, the study explores the emotional impact of the broadcast on viewers, focusing on responses such as fear, anxiety, identification, projection, and the activation of psychological defense mechanisms. It also reflects on the broader sociocultural consequences of such representations of violence in public media. The article concludes by emphasizing the need for public investment in inclusive and high-quality education as a structural response to youth vulnerability, school dropout, and the risk of recruitment by organized criminal groups in Ecuador. Full article
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19 pages, 488 KB  
Article
A Little Too Little, A Little Too Late: The Political Impact of Russia’s Anti-Corruption Enforcement
by Marina Zaloznaya and William M. Reisinger
Laws 2025, 14(2), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/laws14020020 - 21 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 5041
Abstract
Similarly to “wars” on drugs and terrorism, the fight against corruption has recently emerged as an attractive political tool. From Argentina and India to the United States and the Philippines, anti-corruption rhetoric has been successfully utilized by political outsiders to challenge establishment candidates. [...] Read more.
Similarly to “wars” on drugs and terrorism, the fight against corruption has recently emerged as an attractive political tool. From Argentina and India to the United States and the Philippines, anti-corruption rhetoric has been successfully utilized by political outsiders to challenge establishment candidates. It remains less clear, however, whether anti-corruption enforcement allows incumbent politicians to hold on to power. In this article, we use a comparative subnational design to analyze the impact of corruption prosecutions on electoral support for the president of Russia. By combining original survey data on popular political attitudes and behaviors as well as citizens’ own participation in petty corruption with official statistics on corruption prosecutions, on the one hand, and data on media coverage of regional corruption scandals, on the other, we reveal a small negative effect of anti-corruptionism on voting for Putin. Our data allow us to adjudicate among several theoretical mechanisms that may lead to this effect. We find that, although ordinary Russians dislike corruption and expect the federal government to fight it, Putin’s anti-corruption enforcement has failed to convince the population that he is the right man for the job. Some Russians, we argue, take the Kremlin’s prosecutions as an indicator of the regime’s failure to prevent corruption among its agents, while others resent the administration for trying to score political points through hyped-up and punitive anti-corruptionism. Full article
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16 pages, 1416 KB  
Article
Covering the Israeli–Palestinian Conflict: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Al Jazeera English and BBC’s Online Reporting on the 2023 Gaza War
by Kareem El Damanhoury, Faisal Saleh and Madeleine Lebovic
Journal. Media 2025, 6(1), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia6010009 - 16 Jan 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 26202
Abstract
The Hamas surprise attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, and the Israeli military response unleashed a catastrophic episode of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and exacerbated broader tensions in the region. This study compares Al Jazeera English (AJE) and BBC’s coverage of and [...] Read more.
The Hamas surprise attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, and the Israeli military response unleashed a catastrophic episode of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and exacerbated broader tensions in the region. This study compares Al Jazeera English (AJE) and BBC’s coverage of and discourse around key events in the early stages of the 2023 Israel–Gaza War. Using critical discourse analysis as an analytical framework, this study employs mixed methods to compare transitivity, intertextuality, and lexicalization as key discursive features in the two outlets’ coverage of the war. Counter to previous qualitative works, this study quantitatively reveals no variation between AJE and BBC’s use of active voice yet points to key qualitative differences in the discursive treatment of Palestinians and the reporting on death tolls. It further demonstrates drastic differences in the quoting patterns and negative lexicalization of the early phases of the war, with AJE taking a more balanced approach and BBC refraining from emphasizing accusations against Israel of committing “genocide”, “ethnic cleansing”, “terrorism”, and “war crimes”. The study concludes with a discussion of the implications of differential discourses around the Gaza War and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in international media. Full article
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24 pages, 912 KB  
Article
The British Broadsheet Press and the Representation of “The Mosque” in the Aftermath of Post-7/7 Britain
by Irfan Raja
Religions 2024, 15(10), 1157; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15101157 - 25 Sep 2024
Viewed by 3158
Abstract
The role of the mosque has become increasingly vital, particularly in contemporary societies such as Britain, where both the place and status of religion in public life are constantly discussed and debated. Indeed, in the contemporary period, the role of the mosque has [...] Read more.
The role of the mosque has become increasingly vital, particularly in contemporary societies such as Britain, where both the place and status of religion in public life are constantly discussed and debated. Indeed, in the contemporary period, the role of the mosque has several dimensions, ranging from a social space, educational and cultural exchange, and community cohesion centre to a knowledge hub. In this context, this paper suggests that a mosque should be seen as an independent religious institution, although these are influenced by and responsive to governments, elites, pressure groups, public bodies, etc. Using a thematic analysis of news items in The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph over a period of two years (8 July 2005–7 July 2007), it finds that in the aftermath of 7/7, the mosque as a religious place and an institution for British Muslims is largely seen as incompatible and a threat to secular British society and that it is linked with radicalisation and terrorism. According to Quranic texts and revelations, it is indeed a fact that mosques are open to all. This is logical since God’s mercy, love, and forgiveness are for all of mankind without any distinction, which is perhaps why the mosque has been the sacred house of God Himself. This study aims to reveal the development of visible hostility in some sections of the British media and political campaigns. Moreover, it intends to trace the determination and idea of the mosque as a religious place and an institution for British Muslims rather than only a place for worship. Finally, this study will argue the role of the mosque in promoting community cohesion and mutual understanding within the Muslim and other faith communities located in Britain. Full article
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17 pages, 324 KB  
Article
Reimaging Subjugated Voice in Africa: A Battle for Hearts and Minds in Terrorism Studies
by Samwel Oando and Mohammed Ilyas
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(6), 294; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060294 - 29 May 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2538
Abstract
A rare consensus points to the question of normativity, with an inclination towards the Eurocentric Frankfurt School of Critical Theory, which seems to have been central to Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS). Given the universality of knowledge exerting pressure on scholars to conform with [...] Read more.
A rare consensus points to the question of normativity, with an inclination towards the Eurocentric Frankfurt School of Critical Theory, which seems to have been central to Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS). Given the universality of knowledge exerting pressure on scholars to conform with traditional theoretical perspectives, terrorism studies pose inequality from Eurocentricity emerging in “the battle for hearts and minds” research. Some of these studies fall to the allure of connivance with the progressively “authoritarian demands of Western, liberal state and media practice”. Consequently, terrorism research risks being dominated by ethical and logical blindness within established research formations. In Africa, for example, some CTS scholars are subdued to cynically use their Africanity to authenticate the neo-colonial and neo-liberal agenda in terrorism research. This article explores the reimaging of subjugated knowledge through decolonisation of methods in CTS. Rooting for cognitive justice and adequate space for alternative knowledge to imperial science, the article contests the battle for Africa’s hearts and minds as a failed process that needs transformation. Consequently, this work is a contribution to epistemological debate between the global North and South, and the subsequent theoretical contestations in CTS. We argue for hybridity by re-constructing alternative frameworks of knowledge production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Contemporary Politics and Society)
23 pages, 2447 KB  
Article
Digital Shifts and Ethno-Political Dynamics: Examining Event and Actor Designation in the Cameroon Boko Haram Terrorism Conflict through Print and Online Platforms
by Willy Stephane Abondo Ndo
Journal. Media 2024, 5(1), 359-381; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5010024 - 14 Mar 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2578
Abstract
This study examines how the issue of ethnic identity is approached in Cameroon within the context of combating Boko Haram terrorism, considering the influence of the rise of social media on journalistic practices. The advent of these platforms has fundamentally altered the landscape [...] Read more.
This study examines how the issue of ethnic identity is approached in Cameroon within the context of combating Boko Haram terrorism, considering the influence of the rise of social media on journalistic practices. The advent of these platforms has fundamentally altered the landscape of media coverage, challenging the traditional monopoly of journalists in shaping the narrative of news. How does this technological shift affect the discourse, especially in the designation of events and actors in the reporting of Boko Haram terrorism in Cameroon, whether in traditional print media or on online platforms like Facebook? Do these designations in print media and Facebook discussion forums indicate shifts in the dynamics of the Cameroonian media sphere (censorship, government repression, etc.), resulting from the emergence of new voices in digital discursive spaces? This study employs a dual analysis, integrating a critical examination of media discourse with a sociological study of journalistic production. The scrutiny of media discourse is based on the investigation of 497 articles published between 1st January and 30 June 2015, sourced from seven Cameroonian newspapers. The online corpus encompasses 450 written publications from three Facebook forums. We aim to establish a dialectical relationship between newspaper discourse, online content, and the sociological foundations shaping their production. The observed quality of designations in the studied forums unveils a surge in hate speech within the ethno-political landscape of Cameroon. While this phenomenon remained manageable through the intervention of state regulatory bodies in traditional media, the unrestrained nature of online content, coupled with the absence of state control, has facilitated the rise of inter-ethnic discursive hatred in politics. In conclusion, this study underscores the challenges stemming from the evolution of journalistic practices in a technological landscape and emphasizes the urgent need for regulatory frameworks to counteract the upswing in hate speech and inter-ethnic tensions within political discourse. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Journalism in Africa: New Trends)
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18 pages, 313 KB  
Article
Within and Beyond the Community: Tensions in Muslim Service Provision in Switzerland
by Noemi Trucco, Hansjörg Schmid and Amir Sheikhzadegan
Religions 2024, 15(1), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010015 - 21 Dec 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3389
Abstract
Muslim religious professionals are caught between the expectations of the community they serve and belong to and the expectations of the society they live in. Drawing on Helmut Plessner’s notion of “antithetical tensions between community and society”, this study addresses questions of how [...] Read more.
Muslim religious professionals are caught between the expectations of the community they serve and belong to and the expectations of the society they live in. Drawing on Helmut Plessner’s notion of “antithetical tensions between community and society”, this study addresses questions of how Muslim religious professionals experience these tensions and how they cope with them. The data presented are based on semi-structured interviews conducted as part of exploratory research on Muslim service providers in the Canton of Zurich, Switzerland. The findings show that Muslim religious professionals have to deal with community-related challenges such as generational differences, social change and fragmentation, together with outside influences including radicalisation and challenges related to society. Given the recurrent debates on Islamic radicalisation and terrorism in media and politics, they are expected to prove they are peaceful and loyal citizens, even though they are more often than not accused of not being integrated into society. Muslim religious professionals work strenuously, often on a voluntary basis, to do justice to expectations from both sides and try to be non-provocative by engaging in low-profile activities. Finally, they reach out to the wider society, e.g., by participating in inter-religious dialogue and, therefore, engage in bridging activities. Full article
17 pages, 1277 KB  
Article
Gauging the Media Discourse and the Roots of Islamophobia Awareness in Spain
by Alfonso Corral, David De Coninck, Stefan Mertens and Leen d’Haenens
Religions 2023, 14(8), 1019; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14081019 - 9 Aug 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 5509
Abstract
This article analyses the media discourse about Islamophobia in Spain. Specifically, an overview of all the appearances of the term in four Spanish newspapers (ABC, El Mundo, El País, and La Vanguardia) is provided with the aim of [...] Read more.
This article analyses the media discourse about Islamophobia in Spain. Specifically, an overview of all the appearances of the term in four Spanish newspapers (ABC, El Mundo, El País, and La Vanguardia) is provided with the aim of finding out when the term was first used and became standard language. The study also demonstrates the links with the public interest and identifies the ideological and terminological attitudes in the discourse of each newspaper. The corpus includes 1475 news articles since the first reference (in 1987) to the term Islamophobia and May 2022, which were quantitatively examined in two steps. While the first was manual and served to document the historical background, the second allowed us to monitor the media content by means of Sketch Engine. Furthermore, the searches for the term “islamofobia” in Google Trends from Spain were also reviewed. The main findings show that both terrorist attacks in Western countries and the controversies surrounding freedom of speech are key to the emergence and normalisation of the concept, particularly since 2015. However, the interest of each newspaper differs, with El País covering the topic most frequently. This left-wing newspaper offers some notable variations in terminology as well. While the three right-wing newspapers consistently relate Islamophobia to threat, the vocabulary used in El País underpins the victimisation of the Arab-Islamic population. According to the Sketch Engine analysis, the usual terms that occur in combination with Islamophobia are racism, terrorism, violence, hate, anti-semitism, and xenophobia. Finally, Google Trends data confirmed the peak in public interest in the Barcelona and Cambrils attacks (17A). Full article
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13 pages, 857 KB  
Article
“Please. Do. Not. Share. Videos. Share. Cats.”: Counteracting Terrorist and Violent Extremist Content on Twitter during Terrorist Attacks
by Moa Eriksson Krutrök
Journal. Media 2023, 4(1), 364-376; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia4010024 - 14 Mar 2023
Viewed by 5035
Abstract
Obtaining accurate information from social media during a crisis can be difficult, but should all information really be disseminated? Social media platforms actively filter out terrorist and violent extremist content (TVEC), but how are users themselves counteracting its spread? This paper aims to [...] Read more.
Obtaining accurate information from social media during a crisis can be difficult, but should all information really be disseminated? Social media platforms actively filter out terrorist and violent extremist content (TVEC), but how are users themselves counteracting its spread? This paper aims to connect the research on media events with studies currently being conducted in information science and digital media research through a case study of tweets during the Vienna terror attack in late 2020. These tweets were manually coded in accordance with Braun and Clarke’s reflexive thematic analysis. This study shows that during the 2020 Vienna attack, GIFs shared on Twitter served three functions: amplification, personalisation and ethical practice. The paper ends with a discussion on the ways cats may function as a countermeasure against the prevalence of TVEC on social media during terrorist attacks and the implications of such countermeasures. Full article
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14 pages, 685 KB  
Article
Threat through the Screen? Association between Proximity and/or Watching Media Coverage of a Terrorist Attack and Health
by Roel Van Overmeire, Lise Eilin Stene, Marie Vandekerckhove, Stefaan Six, Reginald Deschepper and Johan Bilsen
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20(4), 2876; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20042876 - 7 Feb 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2532
Abstract
Introduction: After terrorist attacks, media coverage of the attacks is extensive. There are some indications that there is an association between watching the media coverage and certain health reactions, both mental and somatic. Most studies occur in the United States and often months [...] Read more.
Introduction: After terrorist attacks, media coverage of the attacks is extensive. There are some indications that there is an association between watching the media coverage and certain health reactions, both mental and somatic. Most studies occur in the United States and often months after the initial attack. In the current study, we investigated the terrorist attacks in Belgium on 22 March 2016. Methods: An online cross-sectional survey was conducted one week after the attacks among the general population of Belgium. We measured hours of media watching of the terrorist attacks (hereafter media watching), adjusted scales of the Patient Health Questionaire-4 (PHQ-4) to measure mental symptoms and the Patient Health Questionaire-15 (PHQ-15) to measure somatic symptoms, proximity to Brussels (home, work and overall proximity) and background factors such as gender, age and level of education. Respondents were included if they answered the survey between 29 March 2016 and 5 April 2016. Results: A total of 2972 respondents were included. Overall, media watching was significantly associated with both mental symptoms (p < 0.001) and somatic symptoms (p < 0.001), while controlling for age, gender, level of education and proximity. Watching more than three hours of media was associated with more mental and somatic symptoms (p < 0.001). Compared to proximity, media watching was, in general, a better association. For geographical factors, watching more than three hours of media indicated equally high scores for mental symptoms and somatic symptoms as work proximity (p = 0.015) and overall proximity to the attacks (p = 0.024). Conclusion: Media-watching is associated with acute health reactions after terrorist attacks. However, the direction of the relationship is unclear, as it might also be that people with health issues seek out more media. Full article
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