MIT Study Unveils the True Tendencies of American News Consumption
By PETER DIZIKES, MASSACHUSETTS
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
MIT researchers found that people’s reported media
preferences often differ from their actual online news consumption, questioning
common beliefs about the polarized nature of American media habits. Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune
By
examining both survey responses and web-browsing data, the study reveals that
the extent of media’s influence on political views is closely tied to how
preferences are measured, with real-world data offering important insights into
political polarization.
In a polarized country, how much does the media influence people’s political views? A new study co-authored by MIT scholars finds the answer depends on people’s media preferences — and, crucially, how these preferences are measured.
The researchers combined a large online survey experiment
with web-tracking data that recorded all of the news sites participants visited
in the month before the study. They found that the media preferences
individuals reported in the survey generally mirrored their real-world news
consumption, but important differences stood out.
First, there was substantial variation in the actual news consumption habits of participants who reported identical media preferences, suggesting that survey-based measures may not fully capture the variance in individuals’ experiences.
Additionally, people with divergent media preferences
in the survey often visited similar online news outlets. These findings
challenge common assumptions about the polarized nature of Americans’ media
habits and raise questions about the use of survey data when studying the
effects of political media.
An experiment co-authored by MIT researchers shows that
people’s stated political news consumption does not always match what they’re
really viewing.
“There’s good reason to think that the information people
report in surveys may not be a perfect representation of their actual media
habits,” says Chloe Wittenberg PhD ’23, a postdoc in the MIT Department of
Political Science and co-author of a new paper detailing the results.
Stated vs. Revealed Preferences
The study was motivated by a split within some academic
research. Some scholars believe existing polarization produces highly partisan
media consumption; others think partisan media sources influence citizens to
adopt more polarized views. But few have measured both self-selection of media
and its persuasive effects at the same time — using both survey and behavioral
data.
To conduct the experiment, the researchers contracted
with the media analytics company comScore to recruit a diverse sample of
American adults in 2018. ComScore then combined survey responses from over
3,300 of these participants with detailed information about their web-browsing
history in the month prior to the study.
“In this study, we adopted a novel experimental design
called the Preference-Incorporating Choice and Assignment design — or the PICA
design — which we invented and derived a formal statistical framework for in an
earlier work,” Yamamoto says. “The PICA design was a perfect fit for the study,
given its objectives.”
In the first part of the experiment, participants were asked to report their media preferences, including the quantity and type of news they like to read. In the second part, participants were assigned to one of two groups.
The first group could select which type of media — Fox News, MSNBC, or an entertainment option — they wanted to read, whereas the second group was required to view articles from one of these three sources.
This
approach enabled the researchers to assess both how individuals’ stated preferences
in the survey compared to their online news consumption, and how persuasive
partisan media can be to different sets of consumers.
Measurement Matters in Media Polarization Studies
Overall, the study revealed differences in the
persuasiveness of partisan media across news audiences. When examining the
volume of news that participants consumed, the authors found that people who
generally visited fewer news sites, relative to entertainment sites, tended to
be more readily persuaded by partisan media.
However, when they looked at the political slant of participants’ news consumption, the authors observed a small but striking deviation between their survey and behavioral measures of media preferences. At one end, the results based on survey data suggested that members of the public may be receptive to information from ideologically opposed sources.
In
contrast, the results based on web-browsing data showed that people with more
extreme media diets are persuaded primarily by outlets with which they already
agree.
“Together, these results suggest that inferences about
media polarization may depend heavily on how individuals’ media preferences are
measured,” the authors state in the paper.
“Our results affirm the value of harnessing real-world
data to study political media,” adds de Benedictis-Kessner. “Precise
measurement of people’s behavior in online news environments is difficult, but
it is important to confront these measurement challenges due to the different
conclusions that can arise about the dangers of political polarization.”
Extending the Research
As the scholars acknowledge, there are necessarily some questions left open by their work. For one, the current study focused on providing media content related to education policy, including issues such as school choice and charter schools.
While education is a prominent issue for
many citizens, it is an area that tends not to display as much polarization as
some other topics in American life. It is possible that studies involving other
political issues might reveal different dynamics.
“An interesting extension for this work would be to look
at different issue areas, some of which might be more polarized than
education,” Wittenberg says.
She adds: “I hope the field can move toward testing a
broader array of measures to see how they cohere, and I think there’s going to
be a lot of interesting and actionable insights. Our goal is not to say, ‘Here
is a perfect measure you should go out and use.’ It’s to nudge people to think
about how they are measuring these preferences.”
The open-access paper, “Media Measurement Matters: Estimating the Persuasive Effects of Partisan Media with Survey and Behavioral Data,” appears in the Journal of Politics. The authors are Wittenberg; Matthew A. Baum, a professor at the Harvard Kennedy School; Adam Berinsky, MIT’s Mitsui Professor of Political Science and director of the MIT Political Experiments Research Lab; Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, an assistant professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School; and Teppei Yamamoto, a professor of political science and director of MIT’s Political Methodology Lab.
Reference: “Media Measurement Matters: Estimating the
Persuasive Effects of Partisan Media with Survey and Behavioral Data” by Chloe
Wittenberg, Matthew A. Baum, Adam J. Berinsky, Justin de Benedictis-Kessner and
Teppei Yamamoto, 29 August 2023, Journal of Politics.
DOI: 10.1086/724960
Support for the research was provided by the National
Science Foundation.