To Meme, or Not to Meme: Applying the Theory of Motivated Information Management to the Provision of Support After Depressed Individuals Share Suicidal Memes

File(s)
Date
2019-08-01Author
Willenborg, Jacki Paige
Department
Communication
Advisor(s)
Erin Parcell
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Social media sites are increasingly where individuals seek and share information on a range of topics. The focus of this thesis is on suicidal memes and how individuals interpret them. Suicidal memes are memes that suggest suicide through either text or visual images. No research has investigated interpretations of suicidal memes to date as well as why individuals post them. It is important to study such issues as the interpretations of these memes can mean the difference between depressed individuals, for example, receiving the help they need or those same individuals alienating themselves from their loved ones. Informed by the theory of motivated information management, this study aimed to determine the variance and likelihood of social support provision after seeing a depressed loved one has shared a suicidal meme. Through a four-group experimental design consisting of 161 participants, results indicated viewing a suicidal meme shared by a loved one did not significantly change the amount or type of anticipated support participants might provide.
Subject
Communication
Depression
Mental Health
Social Support
Suicidal Memes
Theory of Motivated Information Management
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/92723Type
thesis