Guided by the risk information-seeking and processing model, this study examines positive and negative affect separately in their influence on information-seeking intentions and avoidance through structural equation analyses. The highlight is that information avoidance seems to be driven by positive affect, while information seeking seems to be more heavily influenced by negative affect. Another interesting finding is that informational subjective norms are positively related to both seeking and avoidance, which suggests that one’s social environment has the potential to strongly influence the way he or she handles climate change information. Implications for theory and practice are discussed.
The article contributes to the conceptual studies of affective
factors in information seeking by examining Kuhlthau's information search
process model.
Affective Processing of Loved Familiar Faces: Contributions from Electromyography | InTechOpen, Published on: 2012-01-11. Authors: Pedro Guerra, Alicia Sánchez-Adam, Lourdes Anllo-Vento, et
S. Narayanan, M. Kaimal, K. Bijlani, M. Prasanth, and K. Kumar. Proceedings of the 2014 International Conference on Interdisciplinary Advances in Applied Computing, page 51:1--51:5. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2014)
H. Spada, A. Meier, N. Rummel, and S. Hauser. Proceedings of th 2005 conference on Computer support for collaborative learning: learning 2005: the next 10 years!, page 622–631. International Society of the Learning Sciences, (2005)
R. del Hoyo, I. Hupont, F. Lacueva, and D. Abad\'ıa. Proceedings of the International Workshop on Affective-Aware Virtual Agents and Social Robots, page 3:1--3:4. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2009)
A. Vasalou, J. Pitt, and G. Piolle. Proceedings of the Workshop Reinventing trust, collaboration and compliance in social systems (Reinvent06) at CHI 2006, Montreal, Quebec, (April 2006)
A. Vasalou, J. Pitt, and G. Piolle. Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Trust Management (iTrust 2006), volume 3986 of LNCS, page 397-411. Pisa, Italy, Springer, (May 2006)
G. Piolle. Imperial College London, Dpt of Computing (supervisors: Jeremy Pitt and Keith Clark), London, United Kingdom, MSc ISO report, (April 2005)MSc background paper.