No effect of partisan framing on opinions about the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE Journal of Elections Public Opinion and Parties Pub Date : 2021-05-31 DOI:10.1080/17457289.2021.1924747
C. D. Myers
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

ABSTRACT Media critics frequently complain about the tendency of reporters to cover political news using partisan conflict or partisan game frames, which describe policy disagreement as sites of partisan conflict where the parties can score “wins” or “losses.” Such frames, thought to decrease trust and increase partisan polarization, may be particularly dangerous when used in the coverage of public health crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic. We report a survey experiment where 2,455 respondents were assigned to read coverage of the pandemic that was framed in non-partisan terms, in terms of partisan conflict, or as a game where one party was winning and the other losing. Contrary to expectations, we find no effect of these frames across a broad range of opinions about and actions related to the pandemic, with the exception of a small negative effect of partisan game-framed coverage on the desire to consume news about the pandemic. These results suggest that partisan framing may not have negative effects during a public health crisis or, alternately, that such effects are difficult to detect in real-time using traditional survey experiments.
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党派框架对COVID-19大流行的看法没有影响
媒体评论家经常抱怨记者倾向于使用党派冲突或党派游戏框架来报道政治新闻,这些框架将政策分歧描述为党派冲突的场所,政党可以在其中获得“胜利”或“失败”。这种框架被认为会降低信任,加剧党派分化,在报道COVID-19大流行等公共卫生危机时可能特别危险。我们报告了一项调查实验,其中2455名受访者被分配阅读关于疫情的报道,这些报道以无党派的方式,以党派冲突的方式,或者作为一方赢而另一方输的游戏。与预期相反,我们没有发现这些框架对大流行的广泛观点和行动产生影响,除了党派游戏框架的报道对消费大流行新闻的愿望产生了轻微的负面影响。这些结果表明,在公共卫生危机期间,党派框架可能不会产生负面影响,或者,这种影响很难用传统的调查实验实时检测到。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
21
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