University of Pennsylvania
Social media networks, which often
foster partisan antagonism, may also offer a solution to reducing political
polarization, according to new findings published in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences from a team led by University of
Pennsylvania sociologist Damon Centola.
The Penn researchers asked 2,400
Republicans and Democrats to interpret recent climate-change data on Arctic
sea-ice levels. Initially, nearly 40 percent of Republicans incorrectly
interpreted the data, saying that Arctic sea-ice levels were increasing; 26
percent of Democrats made the same mistake.
However, after participants
interacted in anonymous social media networks -- sharing opinions about the
data and its meaning for future levels of Arctic sea ice -- 88 percent of
Republicans and 86 percent of Democrats correctly analyzed it, agreeing that
sea-ice levels were dropping.
"New scientific information
does not change people's minds. They can always interpret it to match their
beliefs," says Centola, director of Penn's Network Dynamics Group and
author of the new book "How Behavior Spreads."
"But, if you
allow people to interact with each other in egalitarian social networks, in
which no individual is more powerful than another, we find remarkably strong
effects of bipartisan social learning on eliminating polarization."
To test this notion for politically
charged topics like climate change, Centola, along with Penn doctoral student
Douglas Guilbeault and recent Penn Ph.D. graduate Joshua Becker, constructed an
experimental social media platform, which they used to test how different kinds
of social media environments would affect political polarization and group
accuracy.
Their study was motivated by NASA's
2013 release of new data detailing historical trends in monthly levels of
Arctic sea ice. "NASA found, to its dismay, that a lot of people were
misinterpreting the graph to say that there would actually be more Arctic sea
ice in the future rather than less," Guilbeault explains.
"Conservatives in particular were susceptible to this misinterpretation."
The researchers wondered how social
media networks might alter this outcome, so they randomly assigned participants
to one of three experimental groups: a political-identity setup, which revealed
the political affiliation of each person's social media contacts; a
political-symbols setup, in which people interacted anonymously through social
networks but with party symbols of the donkey and the elephant displayed at the
bottom of their screens; and a non-political setup, in which people interacted
anonymously.
Twenty Republicans and 20 Democrats made up each social network.
Once randomized, every individual
then viewed the NASA graph and forecasted Arctic sea-ice levels for the year
2025. They first answered independently, and then viewed peers' answers before
revising their guesses twice more. The study outcomes surprised the researchers
in several respects.
"We all expected polarization
when Republicans and Democrats were isolated," says Centola, who is also
an associate professor in Penn's Annenberg School for Communication and School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences, "but we were amazed to see how
dramatically bipartisan networks could improve participants' judgments."
In the non-political setup, for example, polarization disappeared entirely, with
more than 85 percent of participants agreeing on a future decrease in Arctic
sea ice.
"But," Centola adds,
"the biggest surprise -- and perhaps our biggest lesson -- came from how
fragile it all was. The improvements vanished completely with the mere suggestion
of political party. All we did was put a picture of an elephant and a donkey at
the bottom of a screen, and all the social learning effects disappeared.
Participants' inaccurate beliefs and high levels of polarization
remained."
That last finding reveals that even
inconspicuous elements of a social media environment or of a media broadcast
can hinder bipartisan communications. "Simple ways of framing a political
conversation, like incorporating political iconography, can significantly
increase the likelihood of polarization," Guilbeault says.
Instead, Centola says, put people
into situations that remove the political backdrop. "Most of us are biased
in one way or another. It's often unavoidable. But, if you eliminate the
symbols that drive people into their political camps and let them talk to each
other, people have a natural instinct to learn from one another. And that can
go a long way toward lessening partisan conflict."
Funding for the research came, in
part, from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, a
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Pioneer Grant, and the National Institutes of
Health's Tobacco Centers for Regulatory Control.