Social support exchanges in a social media community for people living with HIV/AIDS in China

In recent years, social media has become an important source of social support. People living with HIV/AIDS in China created an online support group (the HIV/AIDS Weibo Group) on Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter, in January 2011. The current study examined how social support transmitted in this social media community. First, messages over five successive weeks (2 May 2011 to 13 June 2011) were randomly selected from the HIV/AIDS Weibo Group on Weibo. Next, we employed social network analysis to map the HIV/AIDS Weibo Group’s structure and to measure the study variables. After that, a multivariate analysis of variance was applied to examine the influence of frequency of contact and reciprocity on informational and emotional social support exchanged in each dyad. The results revealed that pairs with a high level of contact frequency or reciprocity exchanged more informational support than do pairs with a low level of contact frequency or reciprocity. Moreover, dyadic partners with high frequency of contact exchanged a larger amount of emotional support than those with a low level frequency of contact; but strongly reciprocal dyads did not exchange significantly more emotional social support than their counterparts with a low level of reciprocity.

[1]  Caroline Haythornthwaite,et al.  Strong, Weak, and Latent Ties and the Impact of New Media , 2002, Inf. Soc..

[2]  Social Support Quality in Internet Based Information and Communication: From "Digital Divide" to "Voice Divide" , 2004 .

[3]  D. Goldsmith,et al.  Social Support and the Management of Uncertainty for People Living With HIV or AIDS , 2004, Health communication.

[4]  B. Wellman,et al.  Different Strokes from Different Folks: Community Ties and Social Support , 1990, American Journal of Sociology.

[5]  Noah E. Friedkin,et al.  A test of structural features of granovetter's strength of weak ties theory , 1980 .

[6]  Mark S. Granovetter T H E S T R E N G T H O F WEAK TIES: A NETWORK THEORY REVISITED , 1983 .

[7]  A. Bambina Online Social Support: The Interplay of Social Networks and Computer-Mediated Communication , 2007 .

[8]  Jae-Shin Lee,et al.  Collaborative Information Seeking in Intercultural Computer-Mediated Communication Groups , 2008, Commun. Res..

[9]  R. Centor,et al.  Different Strokes for Different Folks , 2012 .

[10]  Nan Lin,et al.  The Urban Communication Network and Social Stratification: A “Small World” Experiment , 1977 .

[11]  Liang Chen,et al.  Social support on Weibo for people living with HIV/AIDS in China: a quantitative content analysis , 2014 .

[12]  Dr. Joseph A Meloche,et al.  A Report on the Second Workshop on Collaborative Information Seeking (cis) Collaborative Information Seeking , 2022 .

[13]  Michael Stefanone,et al.  The value of online friends: Networked resources via social network sites , 2011, First Monday.

[14]  Mark S. Granovetter The Strength of Weak Ties , 1973, American Journal of Sociology.

[15]  Mathieu Bastian,et al.  Gephi: An Open Source Software for Exploring and Manipulating Networks , 2009, ICWSM.

[16]  Octavia Sibanda Social Ties and the Dynamics of Integration in the City of Johannesburg among Zimbabwe Migrants , 2010 .

[17]  Howard E. Aldrich,et al.  Organizations evolving (2nd ed.). , 2006 .