TY - JOUR
T1 - The extent and nature of ideological selective exposure online
T2 - Combining survey responses with actual web log data from the 2013 Israeli Elections
AU - Dvir-Gvirsman, Shira
AU - Tsfati, Yariv
AU - Menchen-Trevino, Ericka
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2014.
PY - 2014/5
Y1 - 2014/5
N2 - Do users tend to consume only like-minded political information online? We point to two problems with the existing knowledge about this debate. First, the measurement of media preferences by the typical means of surveys is less reliable than behavioral data. Second, most studies have analyzed only the extent of online exposure to like-minded content, not the users’ complete web-browsing repertoire. This study used both survey data and real-life browsing behavior (661,483 URLs from 15,976 websites visited by 402 participants) for the period 7 weeks prior to the 2013 Israeli national elections. The results indicate that (1) self-report measurements of ideological exposure are inflated, (2) exposure to online ideological content accounted for only 3% of total online browsing, (3) the participants’ media repertoires are very diverse with no evidence of echo chambers, and (4) in accordance with the selective exposure hypothesis, individuals on both sides are more exposed to like-minded content. The results are discussed in light of the selective exposure literature.
AB - Do users tend to consume only like-minded political information online? We point to two problems with the existing knowledge about this debate. First, the measurement of media preferences by the typical means of surveys is less reliable than behavioral data. Second, most studies have analyzed only the extent of online exposure to like-minded content, not the users’ complete web-browsing repertoire. This study used both survey data and real-life browsing behavior (661,483 URLs from 15,976 websites visited by 402 participants) for the period 7 weeks prior to the 2013 Israeli national elections. The results indicate that (1) self-report measurements of ideological exposure are inflated, (2) exposure to online ideological content accounted for only 3% of total online browsing, (3) the participants’ media repertoires are very diverse with no evidence of echo chambers, and (4) in accordance with the selective exposure hypothesis, individuals on both sides are more exposed to like-minded content. The results are discussed in light of the selective exposure literature.
KW - Selective exposure
KW - audience-centric fragmentation
KW - network analysis
KW - partisan websites
KW - self-report measures
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84963670609&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1461444814549041
DO - 10.1177/1461444814549041
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AN - SCOPUS:84963670609
SN - 1461-4448
VL - 18
SP - 857
EP - 877
JO - New Media and Society
JF - New Media and Society
IS - 5
ER -