
On YouTube, different channels cover the same political news based on their political views. Credit: Seung Woo Chae, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
A study published in the open access journal YouTube on May 29, 2024, found that YouTube comment sections from politically neutral news outlets are more likely to lead to collaborative, bipartisan conversations than those from either liberal or conservative sources. ProSone by Seung Woo Chae and Sung Hyun Lee of Indiana University;
The study, which focused on media reactions to the Mueller report released in 2019, found that liberal channels featured more bipartisan discussion than conservative channels, and that mainstream news outlets featured more bipartisan commentary than political vlogs.
Many news consumers learn about the world through social media, which some research studies have described as a political echo chamber, an environment in which users’ political opinions are repeated and bounced back to them. Counterarguments to this view argue that social media is a constructive, nonpartisan forum where liberal and conservative users can openly debate their views.
Choi and Lee took part in the conversation against the backdrop of a YouTube video posted about a pivotal political moment: the release of the April 18, 2019, “Report on Russian Interference in the 2016 US Presidential Election,” commonly known as the Mueller Report.
The researchers looked at the comments sections of 17 YouTube videos shared in response to the Mueller report. Ten of the videos were posted by popular political bloggers (half liberal, half conservative), and seven were from mainstream news outlets: some liberal (e.g., CNN), some conservative (e.g., Fox News), and one neutral (C-SPAN). The researchers used manual and computational methods to analyze the comments on the videos and examine how political parties were represented in each video.
The results showed that there was more bipartisan discussion on liberal YouTube channels than on conservative YouTube channels. Regardless of political leaning, mainstream news outlets generally had more bipartisan discussion than vlogs. C-SPAN, the only neutral news outlet included in the study, had the most balanced mix of conservative and liberal commentary.
The researchers acknowledge that not all bipartisan comments are necessarily constructive, noting that some such comments are “troll-like.” The data collected in this study should be interpreted in the unique context of the Mueller Report, and the researchers encourage future research that explores YouTube comment dynamics in broader and different contexts.
“We found that the proportion of cross-cutting discussions varied significantly depending on both the political leaning of the channel and the type of media outlet. Furthermore, our findings suggest that neutral news media may be a forum for cross-cutting discussions,” the authors add.
For more information:
Where do cross-cutting discussions happen?: Identifying cross-cutting comments in YouTube videos from political bloggers and mainstream news media. PLoS One (2024). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0302030
Courtesy of the Public Library of Science
Quote: YouTube comments section: Political echo chamber or constructive bipartisan forum? (May 29, 2024) Retrieved May 29, 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2024-05-youtube-comments-section-political-echo.html
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