Event

Article-Level Slant and Polarization of News Consumption on Social Media by Luca Braghieri

Political Economy and Political Science Institutions (PEPSI) Research Seminar Series, Autumn Term 2024

  • Wed 27 Nov 24

    13:30 - 15:30

  • Colchester Campus

    Economics Common Room, 5B.307

  • Event speaker

    Luca Braghieri

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars
    Political Economy and Political Science Institutions (PEPSI) Seminar Series

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

Article-Level Slant and Polarization of News Consumption on Social Media by Luca Braghieri

Join us for another event in the Political Economy and Political Science Institutions (PEPSI) Seminar Series, Autumn Term 2024.

Luca Braghieri, from Bocconi University, will present research on Article-Level Slant and Polarization of News Consumption on Social Media.

Abstract

There is widespread concern that the online news ecosystem produces highly polarized content and that extreme content gets further amplified through social media distribution channels. Methodological limitations in estimating content-based slant at the article level have made evaluating these claims difficult. We use data on the near universe (circa 1 million) of hard news articles published online by the top 100 U.S. news outlets in 2019, together with recent advances in natural language processing, to obtain a content-based measure of slant at the article level. Our main finding is that the degree of polarization in news consumption on social media is arguably high. Specifically, the mean slant difference between articles consumed by conservative and liberal users is 1.5 times the ideological distance between the average New York Times and Foxnews.com article. We also show that: i) the majority (65%) of the variance in slant across articles arises within outlets, rather than across outlets, thus highlighting the importance of measuring slant at the article rather than the outlet level. ii) Most news produced is centrist, but the tails of the slant distribution are thick and there is substantial variation in slant across news type and topic. iii) Extreme content is much more likely to be shared widely on Facebook than moderate content. iv) There is substantial pro-attitudinal news exposure and consumption on Facebook even within the same outlet. v) The articles that liberals and conservatives are exposed to on their Facebook feeds are already highly polarized. vi) Echo chambers play an important role in driving polarized news consumption on Facebook.

 

This seminar will be held in the Economics Common Room, 5B.307, on Wednesday 27 November 2024 at 1.30pm. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public.