A Repertoire Approach to Studying Inequalities in Political Social Media Use

被引:4
作者
Lane, Daniel S. [1 ]
Weeks, Brian E. [2 ]
Kwak, Nojin [3 ]
机构
[1] UC Santa Barbara, Dept Commun, 4005 Social Sci & Media Studies, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Dept Commun & Media, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[3] SUNY Buffalo, Dept Commun, Buffalo, NY USA
关键词
LATENT CLASS ANALYSIS; INCIDENTAL EXPOSURE; NEWS; PARTICIPATION; INFORMATION; METAANALYSIS; ENGAGEMENT; BEHAVIORS; KNOWLEDGE; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1080/15205436.2022.2137039
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
This paper adopts a repertoire approach to studying inequalities in political use of social media, focusing on patterns of political behavior on Facebook. A Latent Class Analysis of a 2016 two-wave survey of Americans identified four distinct political repertoires on Facebook; 1) Disengaged, 2) All-engaged, 3) Expressers (only likely to do expressive behaviors) and 4) Likers (only likely to "like" content). Using these classes of users, we reexamined prominent hypotheses in the literature related to whether political social media use is a) stratified by education and political interest and b) associated with increased political knowledge and participation.
引用
收藏
页码:852 / 877
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Selectively Social Politics: The Differing Roles of Media Use on Political Discussion [J].
Ponder, J. D. ;
Haridakis, Paul .
MASS COMMUNICATION AND SOCIETY, 2015, 18 (03) :281-302
[32]   Internet and social media use and political knowledge: Evidence from Turkey [J].
Andi, Simge ;
Aytac, S. Erdem ;
Carkoglu, Ali .
MEDITERRANEAN POLITICS, 2020, 25 (05) :579-599
[33]   Does Social Media Use Polarize or Depolarize Political Opinion in China? Explaining Opinion Polarization Within an Extended Communication Mediation Model [J].
Guo, Jing ;
Hu, Yang .
SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY, 2023, 9 (03)
[34]   The effects of social media use and political communication networks on the Filipino youth's political participation [J].
Bunquin, Jon Benedik A. .
SEARCH-JOURNAL OF MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, 2019, :129-147
[35]   Social Media Use, Political Polarization, and Social Capital: Is Social Media Tearing the US Apart? [J].
Hawdon, James ;
Ranganathan, Shyam ;
Leman, Scotland ;
Bookhultz, Shane ;
Mitra, Tanushree .
SOCIAL COMPUTING AND SOCIAL MEDIA. DESIGN, ETHICS, USER BEHAVIOR, AND SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS, SCSM 2020, PT I, 2020, 12194 :243-260
[36]   From observation on social media to offline political participation: The social media affordances approach [J].
Kim, Dam Hee ;
Ellison, Nicole B. .
NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY, 2022, 24 (12) :2614-2634
[37]   New social media nones: how and why Americans have changed their use of social media to consume political news [J].
Morris, David S. S. ;
Morris, Jonathan S. S. .
JOURNAL OF INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & ETHICS IN SOCIETY, 2023, 21 (04) :468-484
[38]   Online Social Media and Political Awareness in Authoritarian Regimes [J].
Reuter, Ora John ;
Szakonyi, David .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2015, 45 (01) :29-51
[39]   Political consumerism: Civic engagement and the social media connection [J].
de Zuniga, Homero Gil ;
Copeland, Lauren ;
Bimber, Bruce .
NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY, 2014, 16 (03) :488-506
[40]   Motivations for youth's political participation on social media: implications for political marketers [J].
Singh, Devinder Pal ;
Sharma, Kavita .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDIAN CULTURE AND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, 2021, 22 (01) :19-36