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Disentanglingthecausesandeffectsofpartisanmediachoiceinapolarized environment:researchtodateandawayforward Does media choice cause polarization or does polarization cause media choice? This paper reviews the literature to date on this question, including research on selective exposure and persuasion, as well as on credibility, bias and trust. Establishing the direction of causality has proven empirically challenging, and the extant literature is decidedly mixed on the questions on whether partisan media can change attitudes, or merely reinforce them, as well as the extent to which people selectively expose themselves to news and information that reinforces their preexisting beliefs. Following this review, we identify shortcomings in the extant literature and propose several new methods aimed at moving this research program forward toward ultimately disentangling the relationship between partisan media, individual preferences, persuasion, and political attitudes and behavior. MatthewA.Baum HarvardUniversity JustindeBenedictis-Kessner MIT AdamBerinsky MIT DeanKnox MIT TeppeiYamamoto MIT DRAFT-December20,2015 1 Introduction Inrecentyears,pundits,politicians,andordinarycitizenshaveexpressed growingconcernoverpoliticalpolarizationintheUnitedStates.Ina2013op-ed article,famedClintonpoliticalguruJamesCarvillewrites,“Ithinkalotofpeoplewill lookbackatthispointinAmericanpoliticalhistoryandwonderhowthingsgotso damnscrewedup.”Carville’sexplanation,arguablyreflectingthemostcommon widespreadconventionalwisdom,isthat: “…asmuchasanything[it]isthedisturbingfragmentationofthe media.Today,conservativescangetalltheirinformationfrom conservativeoutlets,andliberalscangetalltheirinformationfrom liberaloutfits.Andyoucanspendyourwholelifeneverbeing challenged,neverhavingtohearorthinkaboutorconfront viewpointsthataredifferentfromyourown”(Carvill2013). Theseemingimplicationisthatinaworldoffragmentedmedia,peoples’preexistingpoliticalattitudesdeterminetheirchoicesofnewsoutlets.Ifso,thiswould representaclearexampleofthepsychologicalphenomenonknownasselective exposure–thetendencytoseekoutinformationwhichreinforcesexistingviews. Yet,laterinthesamearticle,Carvilleappearstoreversecourse,arguingthat partisanmedia“makesbothsidesmoredugin.”Theimplicationhereisthatthe existenceofapartisanmediacause,oratleastexacerbate,polarization.This perspectiveplacestheblameatthefeetofthemedia;bypresentingone-sided versionsofissues,partisanmediaoutletslikeFoxNewsontherightandMSNBCon theleftdriveAmericansapart.Theseslantednewssourcespersuadeindividualsthat 2 theparticularone-sidedversionofissuestheyconsumeconsistsoftheunvarnished truth.Suchaprocessofpersuasionrepresentsaquitedifferentmechanismthan selectiveexposure. Thesetwoperspectivesontherelationshipbetweenthemediaandthepublic standatoddswithoneanother.Dolike-mindedindividualsseekoutpartisannews sourcesthatsupporttheirpre-existingbeliefs–resultinginatendencytowarda particularperspectiveamongconsumersofideologicallynarrowpartisanmedia outletsbyvirtueofself-selection?Orisitthecasethatconsumersofpartisannews altertheirviewstoreflectthosepresentedinpartisanoutlets,resultinginincreased polarizationbetweenconsumersofliberalandconservativenews?Intheformer instance,mediachoicereflectspolarization;inthelatter,mediachoicecausesit.We arethuslefttoask:ispublicpolarizationacauseoraconsequenceoftheriseofthe partisanmedia.AsCarville’stwo-sidedtreatmentsuggests,theprocessesof selectiveexposureandpersuasionareoftenconflated. Empiricallydistinguishingbetweenthesetwocausalpathwaysischallenging. Peoplearenotoriouslypooratestimatingtheirownpastbehavior(Prior2009)or predictingtheirfuturebehavior(Clauson1968).Inthispaper,webegintomove forwardindisentanglingthetwocausalprocesses.First,wereviewpasteffortsto disentangletherelationshipbetweenpartisanmediaandpolarizationanddiscuss theshortcomingsofthatresearch.Second,weproposeasetofnewmethodsto answerthiscriticalquestion.Inthispaper,wefocusononepieceofthepuzzle, consideringhowtheeffectsofpartisanmediavarybasedonthepreferencesofthe viewersofthosestories.Indoingso,wealsoconsidertherelatedquestionofhow 3 accuratelyrespondents’statedpreferencespredicttheiractualchoicesin experimentaltreatmentsdesignedtoteaseoutthecausesandeffectsofpartisan mediaconsumption. PolarizationasCauseorEffectofPersuasion? Awidespreadconcerninsocialscienceresearch,thathasimportant implicationsforthestudyofmediaeffects,istheproblemofselection.Whenever socialscientistsobserveatreatmenteffect–thatisadifferencebetweenactors exposedtodifferentstimuli--intherealworldwhenitisnotpossibletocontrol whogetsthetreatment,thequestionarisesastowhethertheeffectresultsfromthe treatmentitself,orfrompre-existingdifferencesintheactorsexposedtodifferent treatments.Inthiscase,studiesdesignedtodeterminetheeffectsofpartisanmedia onpolarizationareillequippedtodeterminewhethersomeoralloftheobserved differencesinattitudesamongindividualsexposedtodifferentpartisaninformation stemfromdifferencesintheinformationorintheindividualschoosingtoexpose themselvestoparticularpartisaninformationstreams. Inrecentyears,manyscholars(e.g.,Levendusky,2013;Arceneauxand Johnson,2013;Prior,2007)haveexploredthepoliticalconsequencesofincreased mediachoiceinthe21stcentury.Todate,theresultsfrominvestigationsintothe questionofwhetherattitudesdriveinformationseeking,oraredrivenbyit,is decidedlymixed.ThereisnoquestionthatAmericansareincreasinglyableto consumeunbalancednews.ThetypicalU.S.householdnowreceivesabout190 televisionchannels,morethanatenfoldincreasesince1980andupnearly50%since 4 2008.Thisdoesnotincludecountlessofferingsonradio,inprint,and,ofcourse,on theInternet.Thatsaid,sincemostAmericanscontinuetopredominantlyrelyon televisionfortheirnews(Pew2014),weprimarilyfocusourdiscussionontelevision. Thisexplosionofmediaoutletshasvastlyincreasedthechoicesavailableto consumersandallowedforthedevelopmentofideological“niche”news programming(Hamilton,2005).Partisanmediaarewidelyaccessible(Baumand Groeling2010,Groeling2013)andoftenpresentnewsthatismorebeneficialtoone partythantheother(BaumandGroeling2008,2010).Forinstance,thepublic routinelyassociatesFoxNewsandMSNBCasbeingheavilybiasedtowardthe RepublicanandDemocraticparties,respectively(Ladd2012).Butdopartisan mediacontributeto,orsimplyreflect,polarizationamongconsumers?Most researchtodatehaslargelyfailedtoaddress,letaloneresolve,thisquestion. Therearearguablythreedistinctstrandsofthisresearcharea.Thefirst focusesonthepossibilitythatmediafragmentationenhancespoliticalpolarization bytheprocessofpersuasiononthepartofthepartisanmedia.Thesecondtreats polarizationasprimarily,oratleastsignificantly,asacauseoffragmentation throughindividuals’decisionstoselectivelyexposethemselvestopartisanmedia. Thethirdstrandcombineselementsofbothofthefirsttwo,focusingonpotential effectsonperceptionsregardingthereliabilityandtrustworthinessofthemediain general,andbeliefsaboutmediabiasinparticular.Indoingso,itconsidersresulting downstreameffectsonpoliticalattitudesandbehavior.1Wediscusseachstrandof 1Researchonmediatrustmightarguablybemoreaccuratelycharacterizedas eitheramediatorofpersuasionandselection,orevenaneffectthereof.However, 5 research,beforeturningtoadiscussionofthepromiseandlimitationsofexisting researchonthesetopicsandproposingacorrectiveforonesuchlimitation. SelectiveExposure Researchdatingbacktothe1940shastheorizedaboutthepotentialroleof selectiveexposureinexplainingpoliticalattitudes.Thisresearch,–perhapsmost famouslyLazarsfeld,Berelson,andGaudet’s(1948)studyofthe1940presidential electionandCampbelletal.’s(1960)theoryofminimalism--foundevidenceofsuch selectiveexposuretopartisaninformationinmediaconsumptionpatterns. Sincethe1960s,theliteraturehasgrownexponentially.Manyresearchers (Stroud2011;Arceneauxetal.2012;GainesandKuklinski2011;IyengarandHahn 2009)haveshownthatDemocratsandRepublicans–especiallythestrongest(Kim 2009;Iyengaretal.2008),andmostpoliticallyengaged(BennettandIyengar2008) partisans–prefertoconsumenewsthatsupportstheirpre-existingbeliefswhile avoidingnewsthatchallengesthosebeliefs.Totheextentthatindividualsareselfconsciouslyselectingintoideologicallyfriendlymediaenvironments,itappearsthat partisanorideologicalpreferencesdrivemediachoice. Someadditionalresearch,however,hasidentifiedpotentiallimitstoselfselection.Forinstance,MessingandWestwood(2012)findthatendorsementsfrom otherpeopleinaperson’ssocialnetworkcancounteracttheselectivityofpartisans intoideologicallyconsonantnews.GentzkowandShapiro(2010),inturn,findthat ideologicallyextremepeopleareactuallymore,ratherthanless,likelythantheir sincethisconcepthasbeenmuchmorewidelyappliedbyscholars,forpurposesof thisreviewwetreatitasananalyticallydistinctcategory. 6 moremoderatecounterpartstoencounterideologicallyopposingnewssitesonthe internet.Ofcourse,televisionandtheInternetdifferinnumerousrespects, complicatingeffortstogeneralizeacrossthesemedia. Despitethislatterevidencethatselectiveexposureislessthanubiquitous,a greatdealofevidencesuggeststhatitisarealphenomenon;onewithpotential consequencesforthepracticeofpoliticsbecauseitcanleadtoincreasinglyinsulated partisaninformationsilosamongthepublic.Ifindividualsareonlyexposedtoone sideoftheargument,compromiseandmoderationofviewsbecomeslessfrequentas individualsarelesslikelytoencounterinformationchallengingtheirpre-existing attitudes.Thispossibilityhaspromptednumerousscholarsandpoliticalobserversto worryabout“mechannels”(Sunstein2001),“thedailyme”(Negroponte1995)– bothalludingtoself-imposedideologicalstovepipescreatedbyindividuals--and “filterbubbles”(Pariser2012),wherebynewsproviderscontributetothestovepipe byobservingusers’newschoicesandthenfilteringtheirofferingstothatindividual tomatchhisorherrevealedpreferences.Each of these closely related concepts focuses on the potential dangers associated with individuals’ insulating themselves, or being insulated by news providers, from opposing viewpoints in their media consumption. Persuasion Thesecondschoolofthoughtarguesthatpolarizationresultsfromthe influenceofmediaexposureonpoliticalattitudes;thatis,throughtheprocessof persuasion..Thisviewrepresentsafairlyrecentturnintheliterature.Asnoted above,earlyresearchbysociologists(e.g.,Lazarsfeld,etal.1948,Berelson, LazarsfeldandMcPhee1954))andsocialpsychologists(Campbelletal.1960) 7 advancedtheselectiveexposurehypothesisandconcludedthatpeople’sattitudes werelargelyimmunetopoliticalpersuasionviathemedia.Severaldecadeslater,the tideofevidencebegantoturn.Revisionistscholarscounteredthatwhilemedia exposuremaynotnecessarilychangepeople’sminds,themediacouldstillinfluence expressedattitudesandbehaviorbychangingwhatpeoplethinkabout,orhowthey thinkaboutit,throughpriming,framing,andagendasetting(e.g.,Iyengarand Kinder1987,Druckman2001,ChongandDruckman2007). Morerecently,evidenceforpersuasionhasbeguntoemerge.Forinstance,in hisseminalstudyofpublicopinionZaller(1992)arguedthatthelackofevidencefor persuasionresultedfromresearcherslookinginthewrongplaces.Zallerfoundthat mediaexposurehaslimitedeffectontheattitudesoftheleast-andmost-politically awareindividuals,albeitfordifferentreasons.Theleastpoliticallyaware individualstendednottoreceivepoliticalmessagesfromthemedia,whilethemost highlyawareindividualspossessedsufficientconsiderationsregardingmostissues thattheywereabletosuccessfullycounter-argueanydissonantmessagestowhich theywereexposed.Thisleftthemoderatelypoliticallyawaremostamenableto persuasion:theypayenoughattentiontobeexposedtopoliticalmessagesbutlack sufficient“ammunition”(intheformofconsiderationsaboutissues)tobeatback informationtheyencounteredthatchallengedtheirpre-existingbeliefs.Notably, however,anyresultingpolarizationeffectsfromtheprocessthatZaller’sRAS (receive-accept-sample)modeldescribesdonotdependonthepartisanorientation oftheoutletpresentingtheinformation.Partisansarecapableoffilteringoutpro- andcounter-attitudinalinformationcontainedwithinagivennewsitemthatmay,in 8 thenet,beideologicallybalanced.Zaller’smodelissimilarinmanyrespectstothe theoryofmotivatedreasoning,wherebyindividualsare“motivated”toacceptproattitudinal,orconsonantinformation,whilerejectingcounter-attitudinal,or dissonantinformation.Theformerissimplyeasiertoprocess,requiringless cognitiveeffort,thanthelatter. BuildingonZaller’swork,otherscholarshavesearchedforevidenceof persuasioneffectsfrompartisanmedia.Forinstance,Levendusky(2013)findsthat newsattributedtoright-leaningFoxNewsismorelikelythannewsattributedto left-leaningMSNBCtopersuadeconservatives(forcomparablefindings,seealso e.g.,Feldman2011b,Bullock2011,JeritandBarabas2012).Thatsaid,some evidencehasemergedsuggestingthatAmericansarenotyetentirelyensconcedin impenetrableinformationsilos.Forinstance,Dilliplane(2013)reportsevidence thatinformationfromcounter-attitudinalmediamaypersuadeevenstrong partisansandthehighlypoliticallyaware.Alongtheselines,Feldman(2011a)finds thatbothpro-andcounter-attitudinalvisualmediacaninfluencepolitical ideologues.However,theevidenceonwhenpartisanmediaarepersuasiveismixed. Additionalresearchappearstosuggestthatpartisanmediacanproduce tangiblepersuasioneffects.Forinstance,withrespecttoclimatechange,countless pundits,particularlyontheleft,haveblamedFoxNewsforthewidespreadbelief, primarilythoughbynomeansexclusivelyamongRepublicans,thateitherclimate changeisnotreal,orifitisrealthathumansarenotcontributingtoit(Meyer2012). Hmielowksi,Feldman,Myers,andLeiserowitz(2013:13),inturn,concludeinpartthat “themoreAmericansuseconservativemedia,thelesscertaintheyarethatglobal 9 warmingishappening.”Theclearimplicationoftheirfindingsisthatpartisanmedia havewidened,ifnotcreatedinthefirstinstance,thedivideonclimatechangebetween DemocratsandRepublicans,primarilybydissuadingRepublicansofitsvalidity. MediaTrustandPoliticalAttitudesandBehavior. Thisthirdpredominantstrandofpolarizationresearchisarguablyan extensionofthepriortwo,ratherthanaseparateenterprise.Thatsaid,because scholarshaveinvestigatedthecausesandeffectsoftrustinnumerousdomains beyondpersuasionandselectiveexposure,wetreatithereasaseparatecategory (thoughwealsopointouthowtrustmediatesthepriortworesearchstrandswe havediscussed). So,inthepresentcontext,wefocusourattentiononscholarlyeffortsto delineatetheeffectsofmediachoiceonpolarizationofattitudestowardsthemedia. Asnotedabove,confidenceintraditional(TV,newspaper)andnew(Internet)media outletsreachedall-timelowsin2014.Indeed,accordingtoGallup,between1976 and2014,thepercentageofAmericansexpressing“greatdeal”or“afairamount”of trustinthemediaoverallfellfrom72to44percent.Aconsequenceofthisdistrust wereonfulldislpayinthe2016Republicanprimarydebates–particularlythe October28,2016CNBCdebate--wherecandidatesfromTedCruztoMarcoRubioto BenCarsonandDonaldTrumpearnedamongtheirstrongestliveaudienceand (fellowpartisan)voterapprobationwithaccusationsofmediabiasagainst themselvesandtheirparty.Indeed,attacksonthemediaasbiasedandunreliable emergedasamongthemostreliableapplauselinesamongRepublicanand 10 Independentvotersinthe2016primarycampaign. Thatsaid,objectivelyestablishingthepresenceorabsenceofpartisanbiasin newscontenthasprovendifficult.Self-describedmediawatchdoggroupssuchas theMediaResearchCenter(MRC),theCenterforMediaandPublicAffairs(CMPA), andFairnessandAccuracyInReporting(FAIR)claimtoobjectivelyanalyzemedia content,yettheyroutinelydisagreeontheincidence,severity,anddirectionofbias inthemedia.Scholarlyattemptstoassessmediabiasaresimilarlyinconclusive(e.g., Efron,1971;Patterson,1993;Sutter,2001).Amongtheprincipaldifficultiesin establishingthepresenceorabsenceofmediabiasisestablishingacleardefinition ofwhatexactlyconstitutesbias.Severalrecentstudies(Groseclose2011,Groseclose &Milyo,2005;Gentzkow&Shapiro,2006,Baum&Groeling2008,Hamilton2003) havesoughttoempiricallymeasuremainstreamnewsmediacontentagainst variousstandards,buthavecometoverydifferentconclusions. Irrespectiveofthe“truth,”fromanormativeperspective,mediatrustis criticalbecausepeoplewhodistrustthemediamayconcludeitcannotreportinan unbiasedmannerandsodismissitscontentasunreliablealtogether.Moreover, ordinarycitizensmayalsobegintoseebiasinwhatisactuallyobjectiveand balancedpoliticalreporting.Numerousstudieshavefoundevidenceofthisso-called hostilemediaphenomenon(Valloneetal.1985,Giner-SorollaandChaiken1994, Peffleyetal.2001,GuntherandSchmitt2004,MorehouseMendez2004,Baumand Gussin2008),wherebytypicalindividualstendtoviewthemediaasbiasedagainst theirownviews.Asaresult,citizensmayincreasinglybecomesuspiciousofand antagonistictowardthenewsmediamoregenerally(Arceneauxetal.,2012;Ladd, 11 2012).Ladd(2012),infact,findsempiricalevidencethatrisingpublicdistrustinthe mediahasreducedpublicwillingnesstoacceptinformationfromthemediaas reliable.Instead,partisanpredispositionsincreasinglydrivepublicbeliefsand votingbehavior. Thatsaid,agrowingbodyofresearchshowsthatpeoplereactdifferentlyto identicalcontentdependingonwhetherornottheyconsiderthesourcetrustworthy andcredible(BaumandGussin,2008;Druckman,Fein,andLeeper,2012; Levendusky2013,BaumandGroeling2010).Inparticular,partisanreputation interactswithperceptionsofcredibilitytomediatethepersuasivenessof informationappearingonpartisanoutlets.Alongtheselines,BaumandGroeling (2009)conductedanexperimentinwhichtheyexposedparticipantstoanews reportaboutacongressionalhearingonnationalsecurityinwhichoneortheother partypraisedorcriticizedtheBushAdministration’spolicies.Theymodifiedthe reporttoappearalternatelyasappearingonCNNorFoxNews.Theyfoundthat participantswhosawcriticismoftheRepublicanpresident’spoliciesonFox, downgradedtheirassessmentsofthepresident’sperformanceonnationalsecurity. ThesamewasnottrueofthosewhosawtheidenticalcriticismonCNN,The oppositepatternemergedforpraiseofthepresident’spolicies.Theauthorsargue thatthispatternisaresultofcalculationsamongthepublic.Foraconservative outlet(Fox)tocriticizeaRepublicanpresidentiscostlyrhetoric(thatis,contraryto Fox’sperceivedinterests),whileforthemoreliberalCNNsuchcriticismisperceived ascheaptalk.Conversely,respondentsperceivedpraiseofaRepublicanonCNNas costly,whilethesamepraisetheyviewedthesamepraiseappearingonFoxas 12 cheaptalk.Thisimpliesthatexposuretopartisanmediacaninfluenceattitudes, albeitdependingonwhetherviewersperceivethecoverageinquestionascostlyor cheaptalk. Additionalresearchshowsthatwhenindividualsencountercounterattitudinalinformation,itcanproduceabacklash,resultinginevenmorepolarized opinions(Zaller1992)andgreaterhostilitytowardthemedia(Arceneaux,Johnson, andMurphy2012).Theselectionofindividualsintoconsumingmediathat reinforcestheiropinionscouldthusdrivegroupsfurtherapartbothintheir attitudestowardissuesandpeoplewhodisagreewiththem.Indeed,some additionalevidencesuggeststhatstrongideologueswhoselectintopartisannews sourcesbecomemoreideologicallyextreme(Bullock2011,Feldman2011,Jerritand Barabas,2012),implyingthatexposuretopartisaninformationstreamscan,via persuasion,increasepolarization,evenamongalready-somewhat-polarized partisans.Theselatterfindings,alongwiththoseofBaumandGroeling(2010)and researchonthehostilemediaphenomenon,combinetosuggestanindirectpathway topolarization.Thatis,thesefindingsraisethepossibilitythatbothselective exposureandpersuasionmaycontributetopolarizationdirectly,throughtheir independenteffectsonmediaconsumers,andalsoindirectly,throughtheeffectof initialtrustandperceivedbiasontheselectionandacceptanceofmediacontent. Conroy-KrutzandMoehler(2014),inturn,showthatpeoplewillbemore easilypersuadedbyopposingmediawhenpoliticalcleavagesarelessclearinless polarizedmediaenvironments(thatis,non-overtly-partisannewsoutlets). Furthermore,individualswhoarewillingtowatchcounter-attitudinalmediaare 13 alsolikelytobepersuadedbyit(Levendusky2013).Thereasonmaybethat relativelyopen-mindedindividualsaremorelikelytobeinclinedtoexpose themselvestocounter-attitudinalmedia.Ifso,thispatternwouldbedrivenmoreby selectionthanpersuasion.Ingeneral,whenindividualsperceiveoppositionalmedia ascredible,theymayalsofinditpersuasiveregardlessofitsperspective (Levendusky2013b,BaumandGroeling2008).Thisresearchsuggeststhatevenin aneraofmediaconsumptionincreasinglycharacterizedbypartisanself-selection, andevenamongstrongpartisans,theremaystillexistthepotentialformoderation ofextremeideologicalviews. LimitationsandPromiseofExistingResearch Todate,whenattemptingtoisolatethecausalstoryunderlyingthese hypothesizedeffectsofmediafragmentation,scholarshavestruggledtoresolvethe underlyingselectionproblem.Inotherwords,wheneversocialscientistsobservea differenceintherealworldbetweenindividualsexposedtodifferenttreatments, thequestionarisesastowhethertheeffectresultsfromthetreatment,orfrompreexistingdifferencesintheindividualsexposedtodifferenttreatments.Inthiscase, evencontrolledexperimentsdesignedtodeterminetheeffectsofpartisanmediaon polarizationareillequippedtodeterminewhethersomeoralloftherealworld observeddifferencesinattitudesamongindividualsexposedtodifferent informationstemfromdifferencesintheinformationorintheindividualschoosing toexposethemselvestoparticularinformationstreams.Mappingfromthe laboratorytotherealworldintroducessomedifficultinferentialproblems. 14 Typicalexperimentsbeginbyassessingparticipants’politicalpartisanship andideology.Researchersthenpresentparticipantswithoneoftwosetsof treatments:(a)multiplenewsitemsfromwhichtochoose,or(b)asinglerandomly assignednewsitem,withparticipantssubsequentlyaskedtheiropinionsononeor moreissuesoverwhichpartisansusuallydisagree.Theformerdesignallows investigatorstodeterminetheextenttowhichparticipantschooseinformation sourcescompatiblewiththeirpreexistingbeliefs,aswellastomeasuredifferences inattitudesbetweenparticipantsexposedtodifferentinformationsources.The latterdesignallowsforinvestigationofpersuasioneffectsforthesinglesource,but doesnotaccountfortheself-selectionthattakesplaceintherealworld. Forinstance,Feldman(2011a)exposedparticipantstooneofthreenews clipsrelatedtohealthcarereformfromleft-leaning(CountdownwithKeith Olbermann),right-leaning(GlennBeck),andcentrist(NewsHourwithJimLehrer) outlets.Shethenassessedattitudechangeamongparticipants,dependingontheir partisanorientation.Thisstudyiswellsuitedtomeasuretheattitudinaleffectsof exposuretoaparticularinformationstream.Yetbecauseitcannotaccountforthe heterogeneityintroducedbyself-selectionintomediasources,itdoesnotaddress thepossibilitythattheobservedtreatmenteffectsmaybeover-statedbyvirtueof forcingparticipantstowatchaparticularnewsitem,irrespectiveoftheir preferences.Numerousstudies(e.g.,Levendusky2013;Taniguchi2011;Feldman 2011b;JeritandBarabas2012;BaumandGroeling2009;SlothuusanddeVreese 2010haveemployedsimilardesignstoinvestigatevariationsonasimilartheme: thesestudiesalltakeupthequestionofhowmucheffectdoesexposureto 15 informationhaveonindividuals’attitudes,conditioningontheirpartisanship, ideology,orpoliticalawareness. Studiesthataccountforself-selectionthroughtheseconddesignarerelatively rare.OnerecentexampleisEllithorpeetal.(2013),whostudytheeffectsofdifferent mediaenvironmentsonnewsconsumptionandattitudes,findingthatthechoice environmentplaysanimportantroleinmediatingtheeffectsofmediaconsumption onpoliticalattitudes.NatalieStroud(Stroud,2011),inturn,invitedexperimental subjectstoparticipateinalaboratorystudy.Inthewaitingroom,whilethey nominallywaitedtobeginthestudy,shepresentedthemwithavarietyofnewsand entertainmentmagazinesthatweresimplyplacedonatablenearwheretheywere sitting.Sheobservedtheirmagazinechoicesandtheamountoftimetheyspentwith eachmagazinetoestimatetheamountofselectiveexposurebehavior. KevinArceneauxandhiscolleagues(ArceneauxandJohnson,2013; Arceneauxetal.,2012)offeravariationonthisthemethatrepresentsanimportant, yetincomplete,stepforward.Inbothstudies,Arceneauxandhiscolleaguesconduct aseriesofexperimentsaimedinpartataddressingtheselectionproblemin polarizationandpersuasionresearch.Inonesetofstudies,themethodology approximatestheforcedexposuredesignthatexperimentersstudyingmotivated reasoningandpersuasiontypicallyutilize.Asdescribedabove,theexperimenters presentaliberal,conservative,orentertainmentnewsstorytoarespondent,and thenobservetheeffectsofthattreatmentonsubsequentattitudes(seeStudy1in Figure1,below).Arceneauxandhiscolleaguesgoonestepfurther,however,by conductingparallelexperimentsinwhichtheyallowedparticipantstochoosefrom 16 amenuofoptions–asistypicalforexperimentsinvestigatingselectiveexposure-- includingbothpartisannewsfromtheleftandrightandseveralentertainment programs(seeStudy2inFigure1,below). Bycomparingtheobservedattitudinaleffectsacrossstudies,Arceneauxand hiscolleaguessoughttoestimatetheextenttowhichobservedtreatmenteffects resultedfromeitherselectiveexposure(attitudesdrivingexposure)orpersuasion (exposuredrivingattitudes).Theirprimaryconclusionisthatpartisanattitudes drivemediaexposuremuchmorethanexposuredrivesattitudes. TheWayForward SortingOutCauseandEffect WhileArceneauxandhiscolleagueshavetakenasignificantstepforward, theirapproachcannotfullyresolvethedirectionofcausalityproblem,asitdoesnot allowrandomassignmentacrosschoiceselectionconditions.Nordoesitcorrectfor theeffectsofbiasedestimatesofsubjects’truemediapreferencesandresulting 17 over-orunder-estimatesofthetruelikelihoodofexposure.Consequently,wehave nowayofknowingwhetherrespondentswhowatched,say,FoxNewsbecausethey choseitwerecomparabletotheircounterpartswhowereassignedtowatchFox News. Morerecently,we(Benedictis-Kessner,Baum,Berinsky,andYamamoto 2016)attempttoaddressthisdilemmabyintegratingbothchoiceconditionsintoa singledesign.Inthisstudy,followingapre-test,participantsarerandomlyassigned toeitheraforcedchoiceorfreechoicetreatmentcondition,wherethetwo conditionsapproximatetheaforementionedfirstandseconddesigns,respectively, employedbyArceneauxandhiscolleagues.Participantsinbothconditionswatched anewsreportongas/oilpricesfromFox(BillO’Reilly)orMSNBC(RachelMaddow), oranentertainmentsegment(fromJaimeOliver:Jaime’sKitchenorDirtyJobs).This design–illustratedinFigure2--makesitpossible,toagreaterextentthaninprior research,todisentangleselectionandpersuasion. 18 Ultimately,wefindclearevidenceofbothselectiveexposureandpersuasion amongrespondentsexposedtobothtreatments.Whilemostrespondents,giventhe opportunity,dosortintoviewingnewsfromtheirsideoftheideologicalspectrum, themajorityofpeople–bothpartisansandindependents–expressapreferencefor entertainmentratherthanpartisannewsshows.Thismajorityalsoappeartobe persuadable,aswatchingpartisannewsproducedsubstantivechangesintheir opinions. ReliabilityofPreferenceClaims Inthesamestudy(Benedictis-Kessneretal.2016),wealsodevelopan uncertaintycorrectionproceduretoestimatetheeffectsofrespondentsmisstating theirtruemediapreferences.Thisallowstheresearcherstoestimatethesampling errorintheirdata.Theproblemisthat,forwhateverreason,somerespondents’ truepreferencesmaydifferfromtheirstatedpreference.Throughanovel applicationofapatientpreferencetrial(PPT),describedindetailinaseparate paper(Knox,Yamamoto,Baum,andBerinsky2015),thisprocedure,illustratedin Figure3,estimatesminimumandmaximumerrormarginsinrespondents’stated preferences.2 2ThePPTapproachhasbeenutilizedinpriorsocial(e.g.,GainesandKuklinski, 2011;Arceneaux,JohnsonandMurphy,2012)andmedical(Kingetal.,2005; HowardandThornicroft,2006)scienceresearch. 19 FIGURE3.DiagramofPPTDesign Note:blueboxesrepresentrandomassignment;dashedboxindicatesoptionalcomponent. Themethodologyconsistsoftwoparts.Participantsfirststatetheir preferences–inthisinstanceovermediaoutlets--inapre-treatmentsurvey(Si). Followinganoptional“washout”period,theexperimentthenconsistsof randomizingthemintooneoftwodesignconditions(Di):eitherastandardRCT design(Di=0)orintoaself-selectioncondition(Di=1),inwhichtheycanchoose fromamenuofmediaoutlets.Theirstatedpreferencesdonotinfluencetheir assignedcondition.Theexperimentersthenassesstheoutcomemeasure(Yi). Thenoveltyofthedesignisthatitallowstheexperimenterstomeasurethe extenttowhichexantestatedpreferencespredictexpostactualtreatment(media outlet)choices.Inparticular,weimplementasensitivityanalysistoestimatethe assumedinformativenessofsubjects’statedpreferencesrelativetotheirrevealed preferences.Wethenusethisanalysistoassesstheeffectsonthequantityof interest(inthiscaseattitudesregardingseveralpoliticalissues)asthisparameter varies.Theendresultisanimprovedestimateoftherelationshipbetweenmedia consumption(thetreatment)andpoliticalattitudes(theoutcomevariables).Figure 20 4presentsanillustrativeexampleoffindingsfromapilotstudyimplementedvia AmazonMechanicalTurkandbasedontheaforementioneddesignfromBenedictisKessneretal.(2016)employingthisprocedure. Figure4comparestheresultsfrompointestimates,assumingnosampling error(thickbars),withthosefromconfidenceintervalboundsthattakesampling errorintoaccountviabootstrapping,andemployingtheaforementionedcorrection procedure(thinbars).Theoutcomevariableinthisinstanceisthepropensityof participantstoindicatethattheywouldsharethestorysegmenttheywatched(via emailorsocialmedia).Thisresultcomparesthedifferenceinpropensitytosharea pro-attitudinalnewsstory(e.g.,aRepublicanwatchingFoxoraDemocratwatching MSNBC)withthepropensitytoshareanentertainmentstory,amongparticipants whoexpressedapreferenceforpro-attitudinalnews,counter-attitudinalnewsor entertainment.Theseresultsshowastrongpositiveincreaseinthepropensityto sharethestoryamongindividualswhopreferredapro-attitudinalvideoandwere 21 assignedthepro-attitudinalvideo,regardlessofassumptionregardingconfidence intervals.However,amongindividualswhopreferredacounter-attitudinalvideo butwereassignedapro-attitudinalvideo,thepointestimatesurprisinglysuggestsa (marginally)significantlygreaterpropensitytosharethenewsstoryrelativeto respondentswhopreferredanentertainmentvideo.Thisrelationshipdisappears withtheerrorcorrectionprocedure.Inshort,oncethepropensityofrespondentsto incorrectlypredicttheirownbehavioristakenintoaccount,thisseeminglycounterintuitivepatterndoesnotemerge. Conclusion Scholarsfromnumerousacademicdisciplines,rangingfromsociologyto psychologytoeconomicstopoliticalsciencetocommunications,havedevoted considerableattentionthroughoutthepost-WorldWarIIeratounderstandinghow consuminginformationviathemediainfluencespublicopinion.Theexplosionof consumerchoiceoverthepastseveraldecadesandwithittheresurgenceofan Americanpartisanpress,emergingintandemwithaparallelriseinpartisan polarizationandpoliticalgridlockinWashingtonD.C.,hasrenewedscholarly interesttothisresearchagenda.Todate,scholarshavemadeconsiderableprogress inunderstandingtheroleofpartisanmedia,inparticular,inshapingpolitical attitudesanddiscourse.Gettingthisstoryrightseemsparticularlyimportantinthe currentera,wherebuildingcoalitionsacrosspartisanandideologicallinesseems evermoreelusiveandcitizensincreasinglyquestionthecapacityofourleadersto overcomepartisanpolarizationinorderaddressthemanyimportantissues 22 confrontingthenation.Togoverneffectively,policymakersneedscholarshipthat willhelpthemdeterminewhenandhowtheymightbridgethesedivides.Accurately assessingthemediaconsumptionchoicesofcitizensandanyresultingattitudinal effectsrepresentsonestepindiscerningapotentialresponsetothisquandary facingtoday’spoliticiansandpolicymakers. 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