Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data

Preserving a common public agenda positively affects social integration, minimizing social cleavages and polarization. Although social media are known for fragmenting the media environment, research has not devoted much attention to their effect on the public agenda. This article addresses whether c...

पूर्ण विवरण

ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखकों: Cardenal, AS, Galais, C, Majo-Vazquez, S
स्वरूप: Journal article
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: Oxford University Press 2018
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author Cardenal, AS
Galais, C
Majo-Vazquez, S
author_facet Cardenal, AS
Galais, C
Majo-Vazquez, S
author_sort Cardenal, AS
collection OXFORD
description Preserving a common public agenda positively affects social integration, minimizing social cleavages and polarization. Although social media are known for fragmenting the media environment, research has not devoted much attention to their effect on the public agenda. This article addresses whether consuming news through Facebook shapes individual agendas that diverge from the set of most important problems (MIPs) as perceived by the general public. Our research design combines survey and Web-tracking data to analyze how Facebook-referred news consumption influences individual consumers’ agendas. We find that when Facebook is a relevant news referral, people are less likely to mention the top MIPs for a representative sample of the Spanish population. We discuss the implications of our findings for the public agenda.
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spelling oxford-uuid:29a55bd7-cdb9-49be-b1ad-d394a23f52f92022-03-26T12:20:25ZIs Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking dataJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:29a55bd7-cdb9-49be-b1ad-d394a23f52f9EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2018Cardenal, ASGalais, CMajo-Vazquez, SPreserving a common public agenda positively affects social integration, minimizing social cleavages and polarization. Although social media are known for fragmenting the media environment, research has not devoted much attention to their effect on the public agenda. This article addresses whether consuming news through Facebook shapes individual agendas that diverge from the set of most important problems (MIPs) as perceived by the general public. Our research design combines survey and Web-tracking data to analyze how Facebook-referred news consumption influences individual consumers’ agendas. We find that when Facebook is a relevant news referral, people are less likely to mention the top MIPs for a representative sample of the Spanish population. We discuss the implications of our findings for the public agenda.
spellingShingle Cardenal, AS
Galais, C
Majo-Vazquez, S
Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data
title Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data
title_full Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data
title_fullStr Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data
title_full_unstemmed Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data
title_short Is Facebook eroding the public agenda? Evidence from survey and web-tracking data
title_sort is facebook eroding the public agenda evidence from survey and web tracking data
work_keys_str_mv AT cardenalas isfacebookerodingthepublicagendaevidencefromsurveyandwebtrackingdata
AT galaisc isfacebookerodingthepublicagendaevidencefromsurveyandwebtrackingdata
AT majovazquezs isfacebookerodingthepublicagendaevidencefromsurveyandwebtrackingdata