PDA

View Full Version : Study finds right wingers more likely to view other side's media



SwordoftheVistula
06-10-2009, 08:24 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20090608/sc_livescience/peoplechoosenewsthatfitstheirviews

Previous studies have asked people about their news reading habits and broad political beliefs, such as liberal or conservative.

But the new Ohio State study took that a step further by observing how 156 college students spent five minutes reading online magazine articles on a computer. The computer recorded the time each student spent looking at pro and con articles about four issues that included abortion, gun ownership, health care and minimum wage.

"A survey isn't the greatest way to get hold of issues," Knobloch-Westerwick told LiveScience. "In my study, we just had people click on things so that we could watch unobtrusively."

As a result, she found that participants spent 36 percent more time reading articles that agreed with their point of view. They had a 58 percent chance of choosing articles that supported their views, as opposed to a 43 percent chance of choosing an article that challenged their view.

Students also commonly spent time reading both sides on any given issue, according to the study, which is detailed in the June issue of the journal Communication Research. However, very few clicked just on articles that opposed their views.

How political junkies read

Only 5 percent of online news readers go to political blogs on a daily basis, according to a new book by a different researcher, yet many represent the most politically active consumers of the news.

Such readers may prefer blogs over mainstream media sources because they suspect bias in the latter, said Richard Davis, a political scientist at Brigham Young University in Utah.

"They're clearly disenchanted with traditional media," Davis said. "That's why they read blogs in the first place - in their view, they see blogs as more accurate."

Davis worked with several independent firms to conduct nationally representative public opinion surveys of both political blog readers and journalists for his book, "Typing Politics" (Oxford University Press, 2009). He also focused on seven of the top political blogs, which at the time included Daily Kos on the left and Michelle Malkin on the right.

Such political blogs are up front with their political views, and typically "echo" the news reported by traditional journalists while adding their own spin or analysis.

But among the hardcore political junkies, 30 percent told the survey that blogs are more accurate, whereas only 8 percent said traditional media was more accurate. About 40 percent gave equal marks to both.

This trust in blogs over traditional media does not carry over to general readers, Davis cautioned. Less frequent blog readers usually give equal weight to blogs and traditional media. And overall, general readers still put more faith in traditional media.

Conservatives buck the trend

Some findings from both researchers suggest that individual confidence and certainty play a role in what people choose to read.

People with stronger party affiliation, conservative political views, and greater interest in politics proved more likely to click on articles with opposing views, according to the Ohio State study.

"It appears that people with these characteristics are more confident in their views and so they're more inclined to at least take a quick look at the counterarguments," Knobloch-Westerwick noted.

However, Knobloch-Westerwick added that her latest study was not designed to assess reader motives, and that she hopes to more carefully study the issue in the future.

The Brigham Young University survey found that journalists also tended to read liberal blogs - perhaps a reflection of journalists' political beliefs, although even conservatives said liberal blogs were often better-written, Davis pointed out.

Among the political blog readers, a similar trend emerged in which "liberals read almost exclusively liberal blogs, but conservatives tend to read both," Davis said.

Davis offered another possible explanation for this trend among blog readers. Conservative views dominate talk radio, and so conservatives may feel more satisfied by that outlet and are willing to check out opposing views on blogs.

By contrast, liberal views dominate the blogosphere, but are scant on talk radio.

Winning hearts and minds ... or not

The big question that remains is whether consuming all this news affects or changes people's views, or simply hardens original beliefs.

Experts have fretted for a while about how people tend to read only what agrees with them. But current research suggests that it's amazing that people ever change their views, Knobloch-Westerwick said.

Some researchers have even begun examining how political leanings are rooted in biology, and the combined influences of genetics or life experiences. A separate recent study suggests that men with more daughters are more likely to take a liberal point of view, while women who have more sons may lean more conservative.

Still, having hardened political views bolstered by media messages might not represent all bad news for a democratic society.

"People who spend more time with messages that bolster their views are more likely to engage in political action, something that's very desirable from a democratic point of view," Knobloch-Westerwick said.

A good article, except I disagree with the claim that 'liberal views dominate the blogosphere'. I don't think any one group can 'dominate the blogosphere' since there is a nearly unlimited number of blogs one can read, as opposed to radio and broadcast TV which have a limited number of channels, or even cable TV and print publications which have production costs which must be covered by a limited number of viewers&advertisers.

quotablepatella
07-01-2009, 02:11 PM
Know your enemy is a good idea, and those who employ such a philosophy have a distinct advantage.

Osweo
07-01-2009, 02:39 PM
Who are the hidebound parochial short-sighted ones, eh?

Freomęg
07-01-2009, 02:54 PM
This doesn't surprise me. It's more common for left-wingers to utterly refuse to engage an opponent in debate than vice-versa. This is actually one of the fundamental traits which saw me abandon my previous, primarily left-wing stance on politics and adopt a mixture of both 'left' and 'right' ideals. I used to feel that leftists were 'truth-seekers' and 'freedom-fighters', and that right-wingers only held the position they did due to a close-minded attachment to obselete traditions.

Needless to say, I couldn't have been more wrong.

Albion
04-02-2012, 11:48 PM
So much for the right being narrow minded. It appears it's the left which so often accuses the right of such that is the real narrow-minded faction.

If you can take the time to read what a different faction says then you are taking an open approach.
So the left which so often takes the moral high ground and claims to be more aware and better educated about matters is actually the least well informed it seems.

Caismeachd
04-02-2012, 11:57 PM
The left don't see things in a reality based way. They don't look at things rationally or objectively according to reality but instead try to shape their reality to their own ideology and beliefs. That's why they ignore the other side and are often very judgmental and elitist as well. If you goto any city where hipsters frequent you can really see who the ignorant ones are.

Supreme American
04-15-2012, 07:31 PM
I do. I still sometimes purchase Marxist publications I just to favor when I was a leftist. The jingoism some of the more extreme ones use (International Communist League's Spartacist, for example) are a real roar.

Online there are other ones, such as the Progressive Labor Party. I couldn't even take them seriously as a Marxist, their writings were child-like and soaked in references to "the bosses."

Supreme American
04-15-2012, 07:35 PM
The left don't see things in a reality based way. They don't look at things rationally or objectively according to reality but instead try to shape their reality to their own ideology and beliefs. That's why they ignore the other side and are often very judgmental and elitist as well. If you goto any city where hipsters frequent you can really see who the ignorant ones are.

Ultimately, they are no different to religious zealots. Compare the two: They see something wrong in the world and the religious zealots will invoke Biblical explanations about Satan whereas the leftists will invoke left-wing social/political theory explanations within the general orbit of Marxist thought.

Reading materials from the two are quite tedious as you never see anything explained in the world outside of the realm of the eternal battle between the common man and Satan/capitalism.