Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences

The hypothesis of selective exposure assumes that people seek out information that supports their views and eschew information that conflicts with their beliefs, and that has negative consequences on our society. Few researchers have recently found counter evidence of selective exposure in social me...

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Main Authors: AN, Jisun, QUERCIA, Daniele, CROWCROFT, Jon
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2014
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/6585
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/7588/viewcontent/Partisan_Sharing_Facebook_Evidence_and_Societal_Consequences.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-75882022-01-13T08:25:44Z Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences AN, Jisun QUERCIA, Daniele CROWCROFT, Jon The hypothesis of selective exposure assumes that people seek out information that supports their views and eschew information that conflicts with their beliefs, and that has negative consequences on our society. Few researchers have recently found counter evidence of selective exposure in social media: users are exposed to politically diverse articles. No work has looked at what happens after exposure, particularly how individuals react to such exposure, though. Users might well be exposed to diverse articles but share only the partisan ones. To test this, we study partisan sharing on Facebook: the tendency for users to predominantly share like-minded news articles and avoid conflicting ones. We verified four main hypotheses. That is, whether partisan sharing: 1) exists at all; 2) changes across individuals (e.g., depending on their interest in politics); 3) changes over time (e.g., around elections); and 4) changes depending on perceived importance of topics. We indeed find strong evidence for partisan sharing. To test whether it has any consequence in the real world, we built a web application for BBC viewers of a popular political program, resulting in a controlled experiment involving more than 70 individuals. Based on what they share and on survey data, we find that partisan sharing has negative consequences: distorted perception of reality. However, we do also find positive aspects of partisan sharing: it is associated with people who are more knowledgeable about politics and engage more with it as they are more likely to vote in the general elections. 2014-10-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/6585 info:doi/10.1145/2660460.2660469 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/7588/viewcontent/Partisan_Sharing_Facebook_Evidence_and_Societal_Consequences.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Facebook news aggregators online social network partisan sharing politics selective exposure social media Twitter Artificial Intelligence and Robotics Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Facebook
news aggregators
online social network
partisan sharing
politics
selective exposure
social media
Twitter
Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing
spellingShingle Facebook
news aggregators
online social network
partisan sharing
politics
selective exposure
social media
Twitter
Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing
AN, Jisun
QUERCIA, Daniele
CROWCROFT, Jon
Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences
description The hypothesis of selective exposure assumes that people seek out information that supports their views and eschew information that conflicts with their beliefs, and that has negative consequences on our society. Few researchers have recently found counter evidence of selective exposure in social media: users are exposed to politically diverse articles. No work has looked at what happens after exposure, particularly how individuals react to such exposure, though. Users might well be exposed to diverse articles but share only the partisan ones. To test this, we study partisan sharing on Facebook: the tendency for users to predominantly share like-minded news articles and avoid conflicting ones. We verified four main hypotheses. That is, whether partisan sharing: 1) exists at all; 2) changes across individuals (e.g., depending on their interest in politics); 3) changes over time (e.g., around elections); and 4) changes depending on perceived importance of topics. We indeed find strong evidence for partisan sharing. To test whether it has any consequence in the real world, we built a web application for BBC viewers of a popular political program, resulting in a controlled experiment involving more than 70 individuals. Based on what they share and on survey data, we find that partisan sharing has negative consequences: distorted perception of reality. However, we do also find positive aspects of partisan sharing: it is associated with people who are more knowledgeable about politics and engage more with it as they are more likely to vote in the general elections.
format text
author AN, Jisun
QUERCIA, Daniele
CROWCROFT, Jon
author_facet AN, Jisun
QUERCIA, Daniele
CROWCROFT, Jon
author_sort AN, Jisun
title Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences
title_short Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences
title_full Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences
title_fullStr Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences
title_full_unstemmed Partisan sharing: Facebook evidence and societal consequences
title_sort partisan sharing: facebook evidence and societal consequences
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2014
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/6585
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/7588/viewcontent/Partisan_Sharing_Facebook_Evidence_and_Societal_Consequences.pdf
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