Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation

In this article, we present a cross-national comparative analysis of which online news users in practice engage with the participatory potential for sharing and commenting on news afforded by interactive features in news websites and social media technologies across a strategic sample of six differe...

Ful tanımlama

Detaylı Bibliyografya
Asıl Yazarlar: Kalogeropoulos, A, Negredo, S, Picone, I, Nielsen, R
Materyal Türü: Journal article
Dil:English
Baskı/Yayın Bilgisi: SAGE Publications 2017
_version_ 1826276783839772672
author Kalogeropoulos, A
Negredo, S
Picone, I
Nielsen, R
author_facet Kalogeropoulos, A
Negredo, S
Picone, I
Nielsen, R
author_sort Kalogeropoulos, A
collection OXFORD
description In this article, we present a cross-national comparative analysis of which online news users in practice engage with the participatory potential for sharing and commenting on news afforded by interactive features in news websites and social media technologies across a strategic sample of six different countries. Based on data from the 2016 Reuters Institute Digital News Report, and controlling for a range of factors, we find that (1) people who use social media for news and a high number of different social media platforms are more likely to also engage more actively with news outside social media by commenting on news sites and sharing news via email, (2) political partisans on both sides are more likely to engage in sharing and commenting particularly on news stories in social media, and (3) people with high interest in hard news are more likely to comment on news on both news sites and social media and share stores via social media (and people with high interest in any kind of news [hard or soft] are more likely to share stories via email). Our analysis suggests that the online environment reinforces some long-standing inequalities in participation while countering other long-standing inequalities. The findings indicate a self-reinforcing positive spiral where the already motivated are more likely in practice to engage with the potential for participation offered by digital media, and a negative spiral where those who are less engaged participate less.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T23:19:02Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:681f8af1-9ab0-4b80-b29d-06463d9c8de0
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T23:19:02Z
publishDate 2017
publisher SAGE Publications
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:681f8af1-9ab0-4b80-b29d-06463d9c8de02022-03-26T18:42:49ZWho shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:681f8af1-9ab0-4b80-b29d-06463d9c8de0EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordSAGE Publications2017Kalogeropoulos, ANegredo, SPicone, INielsen, RIn this article, we present a cross-national comparative analysis of which online news users in practice engage with the participatory potential for sharing and commenting on news afforded by interactive features in news websites and social media technologies across a strategic sample of six different countries. Based on data from the 2016 Reuters Institute Digital News Report, and controlling for a range of factors, we find that (1) people who use social media for news and a high number of different social media platforms are more likely to also engage more actively with news outside social media by commenting on news sites and sharing news via email, (2) political partisans on both sides are more likely to engage in sharing and commenting particularly on news stories in social media, and (3) people with high interest in hard news are more likely to comment on news on both news sites and social media and share stores via social media (and people with high interest in any kind of news [hard or soft] are more likely to share stories via email). Our analysis suggests that the online environment reinforces some long-standing inequalities in participation while countering other long-standing inequalities. The findings indicate a self-reinforcing positive spiral where the already motivated are more likely in practice to engage with the potential for participation offered by digital media, and a negative spiral where those who are less engaged participate less.
spellingShingle Kalogeropoulos, A
Negredo, S
Picone, I
Nielsen, R
Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
title Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
title_full Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
title_fullStr Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
title_full_unstemmed Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
title_short Who shares and comments on news?: A cross-national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
title_sort who shares and comments on news a cross national comparative analysis of online and social media participation
work_keys_str_mv AT kalogeropoulosa whosharesandcommentsonnewsacrossnationalcomparativeanalysisofonlineandsocialmediaparticipation
AT negredos whosharesandcommentsonnewsacrossnationalcomparativeanalysisofonlineandsocialmediaparticipation
AT piconei whosharesandcommentsonnewsacrossnationalcomparativeanalysisofonlineandsocialmediaparticipation
AT nielsenr whosharesandcommentsonnewsacrossnationalcomparativeanalysisofonlineandsocialmediaparticipation