I Share, Therefore I Know? Sharing Online Content — Even Without Reading It — Inflates Subjective Knowledge

114 Pages Posted: 16 Jun 2022 Last revised: 29 Jul 2022

See all articles by Adrian F. Ward

Adrian F. Ward

The University of Texas at Austin

Frank Zheng

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Susan M. Broniarczyk

University of Texas at Austin - Marketing

Date Written: June 9, 2022

Abstract

Billions of people across the globe use social media to acquire and share information. A large and growing body of research examines how consuming online content affects what people know. The present research investigates a complementary, yet previously unstudied question: how might sharing online content affect what people think they know? We posit that sharing may inflate subjective knowledge through a process of internalized social behavior. Sharing signals expertise; thus, sharers can avoid conflict between their public and private personas by coming to believe that they are as knowledgeable as their posts make them appear. We examine this possibility in the context of “sharing without reading,” a phenomenon that allows us to isolate the effect of sharing on subjective knowledge from any influence of reading or objective knowledge. Six studies provide correlational (study 1) and causal (studies 2, 2a) evidence that sharing—even without reading—increases subjective knowledge, and test the internalization mechanism by varying the degree to which sharing publicly commits the sharer to an expert identity (studies 3-5). A seventh study investigates potential consequences of sharing-inflated subjective knowledge on downstream behavior.

Keywords: subjective knowledge, word of mouth, social media, self-perception

Suggested Citation

Ward, Adrian F. and Zheng, Frank and Broniarczyk, Susan M., I Share, Therefore I Know? Sharing Online Content — Even Without Reading It — Inflates Subjective Knowledge (June 9, 2022). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4132814 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4132814

Adrian F. Ward (Contact Author)

The University of Texas at Austin ( email )

Austin, TX
United States

HOME PAGE: http://www.adrianfward.com

Frank Zheng

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Susan M. Broniarczyk

University of Texas at Austin - Marketing ( email )

2110 Speedway Stop B6700
McCombs School of Business
Austin, TX 78712-1275
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
966
Abstract Views
5,284
Rank
48,758
PlumX Metrics