ID | 185030 |
Title Proper | Influence of Unknown Media on Public Opinion |
Other Title Information | Evidence from Local and Foreign News Sources |
Language | ENG |
Author | Peterson, Erik ; ERIK PETERSON ; Allamong, Maxwell B. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In the Internet era, people can encounter a vast array of political news outlets, many with which they are unfamiliar. These unknown media outlets are notable because they represent potential sources of misinformation and coverage with a distinctive slant. We use two large survey experiments to consider how source familiarity influences political communication. Although this demonstrates the public is averse to consuming news from unfamiliar media, we show that—conditional on exposure to them—unknown local and foreign media sources can influence public opinion to an extent similar to established mainstream news outlets on the same issues. This comparable effectiveness stems from the public’s charitable evaluations of the credibility of unfamiliar news sources and their relatively low trust in familiar mainstream media. We find avoidance of unknown news outlets, not resistance to their coverage, is the primary factor limiting their political influence. |
`In' analytical Note | American Political Science Review Vol. 116, No.2; May 2022: p.719 - 733 |
Journal Source | American Political Science Review Vol: 116 No 2 |