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Does interpersonal political communication improve the quality of
individual decision making? While deliberative theorists offer
reasons for hope, experimental researchers have demonstrated that
biased messages can travel via interpersonal social networks. We
argue that the value of interpersonal political communication
depends on the motivations of the people involved, which can be
shifted by different contexts. Using small-group experiments that
randomly assign participants' motivations to seek or share
information with others as well as their motivations for evaluating
the information they receive, we demonstrate the importance of
accounting for motivations in communication. We find that when
individuals with more extreme preferences are motivated to acquire
and share information, collective civic capacity is diminished. But
if we can stimulate the exchange of information among individuals
with stronger prosocial motivations, such communication can enhance
collective civic capacity. We also provide advice for other
researchers about conducting similar group-based experiments to
study political communication.
Expert news sources offer context and act as translators,
communicating complex policy issues to the public. Therefore, these
sources have implications for who, and what is elevated and
legitimized by news coverage. This element considers patterns in
expert sources, focusing on a particular area of expertise:
politics. As a starting point, it conducts a content analysis
tracking which types of political experts are most likely to be
interviewed, using this analysis to explain patterns in expert
sourcing. Building on the source data, it next conducts experiments
and surveys of journalists to consider demand for expert sources.
Finally, shifting the analysis to the supply of expert sources, it
turns to a survey of faculty to track expert experiences with
journalists. Jointly, the results suggest underlying patterns in
expert sourcing is a tension between journalists' preferences, the
time constraints of producing news, and the preferences of the
experts themselves.
There is little doubt that increasing polarization over the last
decade has transformed the American political landscape. In The
Other Divide, Yanna Krupnikov and John Barry Ryan challenge the
nature and extent of that polarization. They find that more than
party, Americans are divided by involvement in politics. On one
side is a group of Americans who are deeply involved in politics
and very expressive about their political views; on the other side
is a group much less involved in day-to-day political outcomes.
While scholars and journalists have assumed that those who are most
vocal about their political views are representative of America at
large, they are in fact a relatively small group whose voices are
amplified by the media. By considering the political differences
between the deeply involved and the rest of the American public,
Krupnikov and Ryan present a broader picture of the American
electorate than the one that often appears in the news.
There is little doubt that increasing polarization over the last
decade has transformed the American political landscape. In The
Other Divide, Yanna Krupnikov and John Barry Ryan challenge the
nature and extent of that polarization. They find that more than
party, Americans are divided by involvement in politics. On one
side is a group of Americans who are deeply involved in politics
and very expressive about their political views; on the other side
is a group much less involved in day-to-day political outcomes.
While scholars and journalists have assumed that those who are most
vocal about their political views are representative of America at
large, they are in fact a relatively small group whose voices are
amplified by the media. By considering the political differences
between the deeply involved and the rest of the American public,
Krupnikov and Ryan present a broader picture of the American
electorate than the one that often appears in the news.
This book addresses opinion leadership in democratic politics as a
process whereby individuals send and receive information through
their informally based networks of political communication. The
analyses are based on a series of small group experiments,
conducted by the authors, which build on accumulated evidence from
more than seventy years of survey data regarding political
communication among interdependent actors. The various experimental
designs provide an opportunity to assess the nature of the
communication process, both in terms of increasing citizen
expertise as well as in terms of communicating political biases.
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