Conservative bias, selective political exposure and truly false consensus beliefs in political communication about the 'refugee crisis' in Germany

The rise of digital media has increased the opportunities for individuals to self-select political content online. This development has stimulated empirical research on how people select political information, especially when political beliefs are at stake. In the present paper, we tested a series o...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-11, Vol.16 (11), p.e0259445-e0259445
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description The rise of digital media has increased the opportunities for individuals to self-select political content online. This development has stimulated empirical research on how people select political information, especially when political beliefs are at stake. In the present paper, we tested a series of theory-derived assumptions about antecedents and consequences of selective exposure to confirmative political information and opinions in the digital arena. We conducted an online survey with German Internet users (N = 897, April 2016) and assessed political attitudes, media use and general beliefs in the context of the so-called "migration crisis". 28% of the participants in our sample reported exposure to a confirmative information environment. They are more likely to hear or read about political opinions on migration and political asylum that are similar to their own compared to cross-cutting content. We found no evidence for the assumption that the technological affordances of the Internet foster this form of selective political exposure. Instead, our analyses indicate that conservatism is a positive predictor of selecting confirmative information environments when it comes to migration and political asylum. We also gathered evidence that this relation is mediated by perceived threat and that selective political exposure is linked to truly false consensus beliefs. Our findings inform supply- and demand-side explanations of selective political exposure online. We discuss the relevance for psychological theories about the motivational underpinnings of selective exposure.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Algorithms
Audiences
Bias
Biology and Life Sciences
Cognitive dissonance
Communication
Computer and Information Sciences
Consensus
Conservatism
Crises
Cross cutting
Culture
Digital broadcasting
Digital media
Empirical analysis
Empirical Research
Exposure
Female
Germany
Humans
Hypotheses
Ideology
Information
Information sources
Internet
Male
Management
Mass media
Middle Aged
Migration
News media
Partisanship
People and Places
Political asylum
Political attitudes
Political communication
Politics
Psychological theories
Psychological Theory
Refugees
Refugees, Political
Research methodology
Social aspects
Social networks
Social Sciences
Young Adult
title Conservative bias, selective political exposure and truly false consensus beliefs in political communication about the 'refugee crisis' in Germany
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