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    Fear of Social Isolation: Testing an Assumption from the Spiral of Silence

    Citation

    Breen, M.J., Shoemaker,P.J., Stamper,M. (2000). Fear of Social Isolation: Testing an Assumption from the Spiral of Silence, Irish Communications Review, Vol.8
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    Breen,M.J., Shoemaker,P.J. and Stamper,M. (2000) Fear of Social Isolation. Testing an Assumption from the Spiral of Silence. (Journal Article).pdf (151.5Kb)
    Date
    2000
    Author
    Breen, Michael J.
    Shoemaker, Pamela J.
    Stamper, Marjorie
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    Breen, M.J., Shoemaker,P.J., Stamper,M. (2000). Fear of Social Isolation: Testing an Assumption from the Spiral of Silence, Irish Communications Review, Vol.8
    Abstract
    An untested assumption of the Spiral of Silence has been whether people’s fear of social isolation affects their willingness to voice their opinions in public, especially if their opinions are in the minority. It has also been unclear whether this should be antecedent to opinion formation or intervening between opinions and willingness to voice the opinions. This study is intended to explicate and operationalize fear of social isolation and, through the use of path analysis, to determine whether it is more logically antecedent or intervening. The results were mixed, with limited support for the Spiral of Silence theory. The path diagrams show that fear of negative evaluation (the operationalization of fear of social isolation) is negatively related to the individual’s opinion, whether the concept is antecedent or intervening. But the fear variable is not related to willingness to voice one’s opinion, suggesting that it may not therefore be an intervening variable.
    Keywords
    MIC
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Irish Communications Review
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/727
    Collections
    • Media and Communication Studies (Peer-reviewed publications)

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