Research using empirical data to investigate the effects of today’s news on young citizens: Effects of Social Media News Recommendations on Media Trust.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sidney B. Westley East-West Center Let’s Talk about Reaching Wider Audiences with our Research Results.
Advertisements

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No: HRD Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations.
POSC 1000 Introduction to Politics Russell Alan Williams.
Political Culture & Socialization. Political Culture Public’s ____________________ toward & their ______________ within the political system – Supportive.
Whose Opinion do you care about? What News do you listen to? Radio? Internet? TV? Do Now:
Theories of Voting Behavior Last time: Who gets the news? Whose opinions can be “spun”? Today: theories of voting behavior, an introduction.
1 Chapter 18 Mass-Mediated Political Communication Effects.
Introduction to Communication Research
Perception between Regular and Sped teachers in Handling Children with Intellectual Disability: Basis for a Specialized Training Program for Teachers by.
Media & Society Dr. Inas A.Hamid
Public Service Media Governance The Good Governance Standard for Public Services Ewan King, Director of Research, OPM.
Section 1 Public Opinion
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION
Ten key parts of the manuscript
ONLINE SOCIAL NETWORKING Barnard College Career Development.
Political Socialization & The Role of the Media The media reinforces values instilled by other socialization agents. The media opposes those value systems.
The Mass Media and the Political Agenda. Mass Media = Linkage Institution Influence MASSES, not just elite Television, Radio, Newspaper, Magazine, Film,
CSWE Child Welfare Symposium Child Welfare Workforce Retention Research in New York State New York State Social Work Education Consortium.
Monday 9/22 RAP Today: Watch media and campaigns. HW: Begin to Read Elections and interest groups; Ch. 9.
MANAGING THE MEDIA HOW TO MONITOR CHILDREN’S MEDIA EXPOSURE AND TALK ABOUT WHAT THEY SEE AND HEAR. Michelle Albright, PhD Director, Weston Youth Services.
Where Do Data Come From? ● Conceptualization and operationalization of concepts --> measurement strategy --> data. ● Different strategies --> different.
APA Format Abstract & Introduction Psychology 291 October 23, 2012.
Journal Club/September 24, Swing et al. Television and video game exposure and the development of attention problems. Pediatrics 2010;126:
Association of Early Learning Coalitions MARKETING & OUTREACH PLAN.
Purdue University Professional Masters in Strategic Communication Atlas Agency.
電管碩一 R 凌伊亭 Social Media Use In a Mobile Broadband Environment : Examination of Determinants of Twitter and Facebook Use International Journal of.
Political Beliefs and Behaviors I Chapter 5 Public Opinion and Political Socialization.
©Ofcom1 Opportunities and challenges ahead? Paul Moore – Content Board member for Northern Ireland.
1)In Who Votes Now?, what do Leighley and Nagler argue are the most significant determinants of an individual’s voting or nonvoting? Income and education.
On Parenting: An Examination of Older Adolescents’ Perceptions of Parenting Styles and Success in College Results ANCOVA (controlling for ethnicity, religion,
© 2008 Convio, Inc. Social Media for Newbies Cynthia Balusek, Convio February 10, 2009.
Teaching for Civic Competency Jeffrey L. Bernstein Department of Political Science Eastern Michigan University Dirksen Congressional Center Congress in.
Public Opinion Socialization Voting Media VocabMisc.
Longitudinal Links between Neighborhood Problems, Collective Efficacy, and Adolescents’ Academic and Socioemotional Outcomes Shay M. Galto, Danielle M.
What is it? Why is it important? What does it have to do with yearbook?
Public Opinion Public Opinion is the aggregation of people’ view about issues, situations, and public figures. Why is Public Opinion important? Public.
Early Childhood Poverty and Adult Productivity and Health Greg J. Duncan University of California, Irvine.
Chapter 8 section 3 “The Mass Media”
Illinois Action for Children Media 101: Making the Press Work for You.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008 Intelligent Consumer Chapter 14 This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
Public Opinion Public opinion concerns the attitudes or perceptions that the American public have on issues that face the United States.
Social capital & Spirit’s ToC Applying Understanding Society data to test a third sector theory of change on social capital and sports participation Pat.
ACM 4063 Communication Research
Public Opinion and Mass Media. The Formation of Public Opinion What is Public Opinion? Those attitudes held by a significant number of people on matters.
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION. Public opinion – the aggregate of individual attitudes or beliefs shared by some portion of the adult population.
Frank Lucia Co-Director Emergency Lifelines TV, Radio, Mobile Alerting for Weather Emergencies – And the Winner is… Interdepartmental Hurricane Conference.
1 How Iranian Americans perceive each other? Sara Sarkhili with special thanks to Hazhir Rahmandad Iranian Studies Group at MIT
Consumer and Business Buyer Behavior Consumer Buying Behavior Refers to the buying behavior of people who buy goods and services for personal use.
What is Research?. Intro.  Research- “Any honest attempt to study a problem systematically or to add to man’s knowledge of a problem may be regarded.
 Video Game Trailer Video Game Trailer  Who’s played this game?  What did you think?
Mass Media and Public Opinion Chapter 8. THE FORMATION OF PUBLIC OPINION Section 1.
Parent-Child Connections on Facebook and Cyberbullying Gustavo S. Mesch University of Haifa Israel.
PSYCH 500 Academic Success / snaptutorial.com For more course Tutorials
Stephen Duginger | Kylee Britzman Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts & Sciences | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign The.
For More Best A+ Tutorials PSYCH 500 Entire Course (UOP Course) PSYCH 500 Week 1 DQ 1  PSYCH 500 Week 1 Individual Assignment Peer.
Voting & Election Vocabulary!. Public Opinion What the public thinks of an issue or set of issues at a certain time.
Chapter 1 Mass Communication: A Critical Approach.
Section 1 Chapter 8 Public Opinion and Mass Media.
Adult Student Match.
CAAS’s We are Aviators Facebook Journey
Social Media: The new political platform
Participants & Procedure
The Role of Adolescent Relationships in Predicting Withdrawal in Emerging Adulthood J. Claire Stephenson, Amanda L. Hare, Nell N. Manning & Joseph P.
PSYCH 500 Competitive Success/snaptutorial.com
PSYCH 500 Education for Service/snaptutorial.com.
Finding Answers through Data Collection
Negotiating Adolescence: The Importance of Close Relationships for Dismissing Adolescents J. Claire Stephenson, Nell N. Manning, Dave E. Szwedo & Joseph.
AP Gov Review: Video #8, Process By Which Citizens Learn About Politics (Political Socialization) Everything You Need To Know About The Process By Which.
Laura M. Sylke & David E. Szwedo James Madison University Introduction
Mass Media Linkage Institutions.
Presentation transcript:

Research using empirical data to investigate the effects of today’s news on young citizens: Effects of Social Media News Recommendations on Media Trust and Effects of Childhood News Media Habits on Young Adult Participation Rosanne Scholl Download this presentation at tinyurl.com/datajourn

About Me Data analyst with economics background Classes focus on data methods, mass communication theory, digital skills acquisition, and critical thinking Research focus on effects of news on democratically important outcomes AEJMC division head, head of one of School’s 4 areas of study

Media Effects Most of what we know about the effects of journalism regards the content of the news – Framing, bias, credibility, frequency Two papers today: effects of news delivery – From friends on social media – From parents during your adolescence

NEWS RECOMMENDATIONS ON SOCIAL MEDIA: EFFECTS ON MEDIA TRUST Study 1: Political Communication Research Group With Jason Turcotte, Chance York, Jacob Irving, and Ray Pingree

Use own facebook page

Media Trust Will we trust media that we get this way? Will we seek out more political information when introduced to it via social media? Does who the recommendation comes from matter?

Two Step Flow of Communication

Opinion Leadership Please answer the following questions about Al Stavitsky, your Facebook friend: [7 point Likert scale for agree/disagree with the following statements:] – This person is well informed about politics and current events – This person is honest about politics and current events

Cues and Motivated Reasoning The recommendation of an opinion leader can act as a cue for the quality of the news source Do we interpret the political content to make it consistent with opinions about the friend’s politics?

An experiment Manipulate whether participant reads a story that has been shared by a social media contact – Or the same story with no social recommendation cue

Choosing the friend Facebook API pulls 100 friends, picks one with recent interactions with the participant

Stimulus [Example of Social Recommendation Manipulation]

Procedure Online experiment with undergraduates receiving extra credit for their participation 1) Facebook sign in 2) Stimulus 3) Outcome measures 4) Opinion leader measures

Trust in News Outlet Note: ***p<.001, **p<.01, *p<.05

Size of Effect of Social Recommend- ation on Trust in News Outlet

Findings Summary When a quality opinion leader recommends an article, we trust the outlet more and look to it more in the future When a poor opinion leader recommends an article, we trust the outlet less and look to it less in the future

Implications Social media amplifies the two step flow Political news can be credited or discredited by perceptions about the person sharing it

Implications Social media enriches marketplace of ideas – Get political information from trusted sources Social media constricts diverse media content – Most friends similar, plus platforms further filter dissonant news – Rare cross-cutting voices may be labeled “poor opinion leaders”

Implications More social media reach is not necessarily better Many sources, some are more deserving, people are doing something rational to use friends to figure out which to trust

Ongoing Gathering more data: currently in the field Effect of partisanship match between participant and friend Effects on other outcomes Interaction with other manipulations

EFFECTS OF CHILDHOOD NEWS MEDIA HABITS ON YOUNG ADULT PARTICIPATION Study 2: Funded Research on Multigenerational Panel Data With Chance York

Socialization

Socialization mechanisms Modelling Defining Other possibilities: –Causal schema formation –Status inheritance –Genetic heritability “Impressionable years” of adolescence

Youth Voting

Expectations

Data University of Michigan’s Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) 1997 and 2003 PSID main interviews: parent and child demographic characteristics 2002 Child Development Supplement: parent and adolescent behavioral and media use variables 2009 Transition to Adulthood Supplement: young adult measures N = 903 young adult respondents

Modelling Youth Voter Turnout Weighted for national representation using CDS weights Logistic regression with MLE estimator Control for demographics, student status, employment status, children, 2009 media use

BZ Parent Characteristics Education * Income † Volunteering Donations Newspaper Use * Talk About News with Child * Television Use Talk About TV with Child Adolescent Media Use Newspaper Television Internet Videogames Young Adult Characteristics Female Age Black *** Hispanic Education *** Income College Student Employed Children Read/Watch News * Entertainment TV Constant *** N903 Model Chi-Square132.97*** Pseudo R % † = p<.10, * = p<.05, ** p<.01, *** p<.001 (two-tailed) Note: This analysis was weighted using PSID weights for national representativeness. A Hosmer and Lemeshow goodness of fit statistic (898.77, p =.32) based on unweighted estimates was not significant, suggesting the logistic regression model fit these data well. Multivariate Logistic Regression Predicting Young Adult Voter Turnout

Expectations

Implications Parents can help train young people to vote, but not via regulating the behavior of teenagers Adolescents may be forming civic orientations that lie dormant until early adulthood, even while ignoring news for entertainment TV and video games

THANK Scholl or Download this presentation: tinyurl.com/datajourn Some visuals in this presentation created with draw.io. Photos tagged as licensed for reuse via Google Image search.