articleScienceJul 27, 2023Closed access

Asymmetric ideological segregation in exposure to political news on Facebook

University of Pennsylvania · Northeastern University · +13 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Does Facebook enable ideological segregation in political news consumption? We analyzed exposure to news during the US 2020 election using aggregated data for 208 million US Facebook users. We compared the inventory of all political news that users could have seen in their feeds with the information that they saw (after algorithmic curation) and the information with which they engaged. We show that (i) ideological segregation is high and increases as we shift from potential exposure to actual exposure to engagement; (ii) there is an asymmetry between conservative and liberal audiences, with a substantial corner of the news ecosystem consumed exclusively by conservatives; and (iii) most misinformation, as…

Citation impact

293
total citations
FWCI
130.42
Percentile
100%
References
31
Citations per year

Authors

27

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Misinformation
  • Ideology
  • Politics
  • Fake news
  • Consumption (sociology)
  • Political science
  • Federal election
  • Advertising
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