Negative effects of long-lasting media attention to public issues on recipients: Conceptualizing issue fatigue

Gurr, Gwendolin; Schumann, Christina; Metag, Julia

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

A significant amount of political communication research is grounded in the dynamics of the media’s and the public’s attention to public issues, assuming that the news media draw the public’s attention to issues, thereby fostering an informed and participating citizenry. However, there is evidence from several countries that this mechanism is disrupted for issues with high shares of news coverage during a period. Against this background, this article scrutinizes the idea that recipients become fatigued from these issues in the news. Having transferred findings on overexposure from other media stimuli to the news environment, issue fatigue is defined as a negative cognitive and affective state consisting of decreasing issue-specific infor-mation processing involvement, perceived information overload, and increasing boredom, annoyance, and anger toward an issue. Issue fatigue can lead to the avoidance of information about the issue, thus serving as a new explanatory approach to avoidance of media information at an issue level. Further consequences, causes, and the development of issue fatigue are discussed.

Details about the publication

JournalStudies in Communication Sciences
Volume22
Issue2
Page range385-401
StatusPublished
Release year2022 (22/09/2022)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.24434/j.scoms.2022.02.007
Link to the full texthttps://www.hope.uzh.ch/scoms/article/view/2705/2718
Keywordsoverexposure, media avoidance, media use, news exposure, news issues, issue fatigue

Authors from the University of Münster

Metag, Julia
Institute Communication Studies