articleScienceJul 27, 2023Closed access

Reshares on social media amplify political news but do not detectably affect beliefs or opinions

Princeton University · Stanford University · +16 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

We studied the effects of exposure to reshared content on Facebook during the 2020 US election by assigning a random set of consenting, US-based users to feeds that did not contain any reshares over a 3-month period. We find that removing reshared content substantially decreases the amount of political news, including content from untrustworthy sources, to which users are exposed; decreases overall clicks and reactions; and reduces partisan news clicks. Further, we observe that removing reshared content produces clear decreases in news knowledge within the sample, although there is some uncertainty about how this would generalize to all users. Contrary to expectations, the treatment does not significantly…

Citation impact

174
total citations
FWCI
76.53
Percentile
100%
References
48
Citations per year

Authors

29

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Politics
  • Affect (linguistics)
  • Polarization (electrochemistry)
  • Content (measure theory)
  • News media
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Advertising
  • Psychology
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