Scientific article 2024
Political predispositions, not popularity: people’s propensity to interact with political content on Facebook
Authors:
- Rasmus T. Pedersen
- Kasper Møller Hansen
- Nicolas M Anspach
- Kevin Arceneaux
- Management and implementation Management and implementation
Social media users are not just potential consumers of political content they are also potential producers and distributors. In this paper, we test whether political predispositions or the popularity of posts best explains users’ engagement with political content on Facebook. Using a large-scale survey deployed in Denmark, we utilize a 2 × 2 × 3 survey experiment that manipulates the partisan sponsor of a political message, the number of likes attributed to that message, and the nature of the comments attached to that post. Our findings indicate that individuals are most likely to like, comment, and share political content that aligns with their political predispositions, as the choice to like, share and comment political content on Facebook is largely unaffected by likes and comments from other users. Though we recognize the dangers of obstinacy in democratic discourse, we are somewhat assured by these findings, as it shows that those who engage with political content do not follow a blind herd mentality.
Authors
About this publication
Financed by
CarlsbergfondetCollaborators
Københavns Universitet, Sciences Po Paris, York CollegePublished in
Journal of Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties