Effects of 360 degrees video on attitudes toward disaster communication: Mediating and moderating roles of spatial presence and prior disaster media involvement
- Authors
- Fraustino, Julia Daisy; Lee, Ji Young; Lee, Sang Yeal; Ahn, Hongmin
- Issue Date
- Sep-2018
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
- Keywords
- Crisis communication; Disaster communication; 360 degrees video; Immersive media; Presence
- Citation
- PUBLIC RELATIONS REVIEW, v.44, no.3, pp 331 - 341
- Pages
- 11
- Indexed
- SSCI
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- PUBLIC RELATIONS REVIEW
- Volume
- 44
- Number
- 3
- Start Page
- 331
- End Page
- 341
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/9145
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.pubrev.2018.02.003
- ISSN
- 0363-8111
1873-4537
- Abstract
- Visual media technologies such as 360 degrees video, augmented reality, and virtual reality are on the rise for immersive storytelling in a variety of public relations contexts. Yet there is a profound lack of scholarly research in public relations, crisis communication, and disaster communication to explore the effects of content displayed using these delivery formats on publics' responses. To begin addressing the knowledge gap, this work reports results from a laboratory experiment investigating effects of media modality (traditional unidirectional video content vs. 360 degrees omnidirectional video content) on attitudes toward the disaster communication content. Results demonstrate that 360 degrees video featuring the aftermath of a natural disaster yields enhanced attitudes toward the helpful impact of the content. Importantly, mediation analyses show that (1) a sense of spatial presence underlies these effects, and (2) the mediating effects of spatial presence are attenuated by involvement with similar disaster media coverage (indirect experience).
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- Appears in
Collections - College of the Social Science > Department of Advertising and Public Relations > 1. Journal Articles

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