SOCIAL INFLUENCE AS AN INTERPRETIVE PROCESS: AN EMPIRICALLY GROUNDED MODEL IN DIGITAL COMMUNITIES

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53606/evfu.25.629-638

Keywords:

social influence, interpretative process, digital communities, social desirability, psychological mechanisms

Abstract

This article conceptualizes social influence as an interpretative process occurring within digital unorganized communities. Based on a theoretical framework and an empirical study (N = 137), the relationships between personality traits, value orientations, and social desirability are examined as factors associated with susceptibility to social influence. The findings indicate that social influence does not operate as a direct effect of external stimuli, but rather as a process of interpreting social signals, mediated by cognitive and motivational mechanisms. Social desirability emerges as a key factor influencing the perception and acknowledgment of influence, while personality traits and value orientations function as selective filters. On this basis, an empirically grounded interpretative-motivational model of intentional social influence is proposed, revealing its multi-stage and context-dependent nature in digital environments.

References

Published

2026-04-29

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Articles

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How to Cite

Halil, A. (2026). SOCIAL INFLUENCE AS AN INTERPRETIVE PROCESS: AN EMPIRICALLY GROUNDED MODEL IN DIGITAL COMMUNITIES. E-Journal VFU, 25, 629-638. https://doi.org/10.53606/evfu.25.629-638