You are not alone: Characterizing users' relationship‐layer identities in online health communities

Online health communities (OHCs) function as significant platforms that people use to obtain information and emotional support. Despite many studies on user behavior and relationships, little attention has been paid to user identities and how different layers of identities are interwoven. To address...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 2024-07, Vol.75 (7), p.807-828
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Kejun, Zhao, Yuehua, Song, Ningyuan, Han, Yufei, Peng, Jiaer, Wang, Jiaqing
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container_end_page 828
container_issue 7
container_start_page 807
container_title Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
container_volume 75
creator Chen, Kejun
Zhao, Yuehua
Song, Ningyuan
Han, Yufei
Peng, Jiaer
Wang, Jiaqing
description Online health communities (OHCs) function as significant platforms that people use to obtain information and emotional support. Despite many studies on user behavior and relationships, little attention has been paid to user identities and how different layers of identities are interwoven. To address this potential research gap, this study examined users' relationship‐layer identities and their evolution by elaborating on the communication theory of identity (CTI) and social support theory. Additionally, based on our previous study on users' personal‐layer identities in OHCs, we investigated how users' relationship‐layer identities interacted with their personal‐layer identities. This study classified users' posts and replies into providing informational support, seeking informational support, providing emotional support, seeking emotional support, and companionship using the bidirectional encoder representation from transformers (BERT), with F1‐scores above 0.848. Through social network analysis, this study found that users of OHCs constructed their relationship‐layer identities more through informational interactions than through emotional interactions. Users with various personal‐layer identities presented different relationship‐layer identities. Users' relationships were more initiated by information exchange, and users with more interactions had more companionship activities. OHCs provided efficient communication channels for people to exchange social support.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/asi.24883
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Communication theory
Emotions
Interpersonal communication
Network analysis
Self concept
Social networks
Social support
User behavior
title You are not alone: Characterizing users' relationship‐layer identities in online health communities
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