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Selective Exposure and Polarisation in Chinese Social Media

Wed, 03/07/2024 - 07:44 — Snurb
Politics [1]
Polarisation [2]
Social Media [3]
IAMCR 2024 [4]

And the final speaker in this IAMCR 2024 [5] session is Liu Youmeng, whose interest is also in the impact of social media on affective polarisation in the Chinese public sphere. Indeed, high-choice media environments may generally increase affective polarisation, and selective exposure to pro-attitudinal content may have a significant role to play here. Individuals’ perceptions about the underlying opinion climate may also affect this, however.

The project examined this through a representative nationwide survey of some 1,300 participants in China, assessing affective polarisation through a feeling thermometer and pro- and counter-attitudinal content exposure through self-reporting.

The results show that counter-attitudinal selective exposure can exacerbate affective polarisation; pro-attitudinal selective exposure was not significantly related to cross-cutting discussion, but counter-attitudinal exposure was; the relationship to like-minded discussion was the opposite. Like-minded discussion can exacerbate affective polarisation; counter-attitudinal discussion does not, but also only has a very limited depolarising effect. Incidental exposure to dissenting opinions did not tend to mitigate polarisation. The perceived opinion climate also affected such results, though.

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[1] http://snurb.info/taxonomy/term/47 [2] http://snurb.info/taxonomy/term/208 [3] http://snurb.info/taxonomy/term/125 [4] http://snurb.info/taxonomy/term/218 [5] https://iamcr.org/christchurch2024