News Values, Cognitive Biases, and Partisan Incivility in Comment Sections

IF 6.1 1区 文学 Q1 COMMUNICATION Journal of Communication Pub Date : 2017-07-18 DOI:10.1111/jcom.12312
Ashley Muddiman, Natalie Jomini Stroud
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引用次数: 130

Abstract

Partisan incivility is prevalent in news comments, but we have limited insight into how journalists and news users engage with it. Gatekeeping, cognitive bias, and social identity theories suggest that journalists may tolerate incivility while users actively promote partisan incivility. Using 9.6 million comments from The New York Times, we analyze whether the presence of uncivil and partisan terms affects how journalists and news users engage with comments. Results show that partisanship and incivility increase recommendations and the likelihood of receiving an abuse flag. Swearing increases the likelihood of a comment being rejected and reduces the chances of being highlighted as a NYT Pick. These findings suggest that journalists and news users interact with partisan incivility differently, and that some forms of incivility may be promoted or tacitly accepted in comments.

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新闻价值、认知偏见和评论区的党派不文明
党派间的不文明行为在新闻评论中很普遍,但我们对记者和新闻用户是如何参与其中的了解有限。把关、认知偏见和社会认同理论表明,记者可能容忍不文明行为,而用户则积极推动党派不文明行为。利用《纽约时报》的960万条评论,我们分析了不文明和党派术语的存在是否会影响记者和新闻用户参与评论的方式。结果表明,党派偏见和不文明行为会增加推荐和收到虐待标志的可能性。说脏话会增加评论被拒绝的可能性,并降低被《纽约时报》选中的几率。这些发现表明,记者和新闻用户与党派不文明的互动方式不同,某些形式的不文明可能会在评论中得到促进或默许。
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来源期刊
Journal of Communication
Journal of Communication COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
5.10%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: The Journal of Communication, the flagship journal of the International Communication Association, is a vital publication for communication specialists and policymakers alike. Focusing on communication research, practice, policy, and theory, it delivers the latest and most significant findings in communication studies. The journal also includes an extensive book review section and symposia of selected studies on current issues. JoC publishes top-quality scholarship on all aspects of communication, with a particular interest in research that transcends disciplinary and sub-field boundaries.
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