The ideology of media. Measuring the political leaning of Spanish news media through Twitter users' interactions

被引:11
作者
Guerrero-Sole, Frederic [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
来源
COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY-SPAIN | 2022年 / 35卷 / 01期
关键词
Media ideology; Twitter; news media; politics; political parties; Spain; BIG DATA; NEWSPAPERS; ELECTIONS; PREDICT; PRESS; BIAS;
D O I
10.15581/003.35.1.29-43
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
The news media have a strong influence on people's perception of reality. But despite claims to objectivity, media organizations are, in general, politically biased (Patterson & Donsbach, 1996; Gaebler, 2017). The link between news media outlets and political organizations has been a critical question in political science and communication studies. To assess the closeness between the news media and particular political organizations, scholars have used different methods such as content analysis, undertaking surveys or adopting a political economy view. With the advent of social networks, new sources of data are now available to measure the relationship between media organizations and parties. Assuming that users coherently retweet political and news information (Wong, Tan, Sen & Chiang, 2016), and drawing on the retweet overlap network (RON) method (Guerrero-Sole, 2017), this research uses people's perceived ideology of Spanish political parties (CIS, 2020) to propose a measure of the ideology of news media in Spain. Results show that scores align with the result of previous research on the ideology of the news media (Ceia, 2020). We also find that media outlets are, in general, politically polarized with two groups or clusters of news media being close to the left-wing parties UP and PSOE, and the other to the right-wing and far-right parties Cs, PP, and Vox. This research also underlines the media's ideological stability over time.
引用
收藏
页码:29 / 43
页数:15
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]  
An J., 2012, P INT AAAI C WEB SOC, V6, P2
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2020, El Espanol
[3]   Tweeting From Left to Right: Is Online Political Communication More Than an Echo Chamber? [J].
Barbera, Pablo ;
Jost, John T. ;
Nagler, Jonathan ;
Tucker, Joshua A. ;
Bonneau, Richard .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2015, 26 (10) :1531-1542
[4]   All News is Bad News: Newspaper Coverage of Political Parties in Spain [J].
Baumgartner, Frank R. ;
Chaques Bonafont, Laura .
POLITICAL COMMUNICATION, 2015, 32 (02) :268-291
[5]   Representation of Youth in the Public Debate in Greece, Italy, and Spain: Does the Political Leaning of Newspapers Have Any Effect? [J].
Bosi, Lorenzo ;
Lavizzari, Anna ;
Voli, Stefania .
AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2020, 64 (05) :620-637
[6]   POLITICAL NETWORKS ON TWITTER: Tweeting the Queensland state election [J].
Bruns, Axel ;
Highfield, Tim .
INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2013, 16 (05) :667-691
[7]   Digital Ecosystems of Ideology: Linked Media as Rhetoric in Spanish Political Tweets [J].
Ceia, Vanessa .
SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY, 2020, 6 (02)
[8]  
Cohen Raviv, 2013, P INT AAAI C WEB SOC, V7, DOI DOI 10.1609/ICWSM.V7I1.14434
[9]  
Conover M. D., 2011, Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE Third International Conference on Privacy, Security, Risk and Trust and IEEE Third International Conference on Social Computing (PASSAT/SocialCom 2011), P192, DOI 10.1109/PASSAT/SocialCom.2011.34
[10]  
D'Alessio D, 2000, J COMMUN, V50, P133, DOI 10.1093/joc/50.4.133