Humanity spends an increasing proportion of its time interacting online. Scholars are intensively investigating the societal drivers and resultant impacts of this collective shift in our allocation of time and attention. Yet, the external factors that regularly shape online behavior remain markedly understudied. Do environmental factors alter rates of online activity? Here we show that adverse meteorological conditions markedly increase social media use in the United States. To do so, we employ climate econometric methods alongside over three and a half billion social media posts from tens of millions of individuals from both Facebook and Twitter between 2009 and 2016. We find that more extreme temperatures and added precipitation each independently amplify social media activity. Weather that is adverse on both the temperature and precipitation dimensions produces markedly larger increases in social media activity. On average across both platforms, compared to the temperate weather baseline, days colder than -5{\deg}C with 1.5-2cm of precipitation elevate social media activity by 35%. This effect is nearly three times the typical increase in social media activity observed on New Year's Eve in New York City. We observe meteorological effects on social media participation at both the aggregate and individual level, even accounting for individual-specific, temporal, and location-specific potential confounds.
翻译:人类花费越来越多的时间在网上互动。 学者们正在深入调查社会驱动因素以及这一集体转变对时间和注意力分配的影响。 然而,经常影响在线行为的外部因素仍然明显缺乏研究。 环境因素是否改变在线活动率? 我们在这里显示,不利的气象条件显著提高了美国社交媒体的使用率。 为此,我们采用气候计量方法,同时使用2009年至2016年期间来自Facebook和Twitter的数千万个人提供的超过350亿个社交媒体文章。我们发现,更极端的温度和降水量增加,每个都独立地扩大了社交媒体活动。 天气对温度和降水两个层面都不利,导致社交媒体活动明显增加。 平均而言,这两个平台的温度和降水量层面都比温气候基线冷,日数比 -5 deg}C低,降水量提升了1.5-2厘米,社会媒体活动增加了35%。 这几乎是纽约市新年夜所观察到的社会媒体活动的典型增长的三倍。 我们观察到,社会媒体在整体和个人层面的参与都会受到气象效应的影响,甚至对具体个人、时间和具体地点的潜在潜力进行核算。