Does Changing Media Reality Likely Affect the Election of 2016

作者: Charles L. Mitchell

DOI: 10.2139/SSRN.2753588

关键词:

摘要: The change and increase of importance ICT in the 2016 election has been analyzed several ways this paper. Qualitative methods were utilized to substantiate hypothesis that social media are becoming more personal ubiquitous 2016. issues occur how accomplish meaningful science about problem recommend qualitative methods. ability research technique make some incremental improvements knowledge a phenomenon potential for sensitizing concepts reason techniques could produce useful results.A purposive sample campaign images was created from 2012 election. Comparing results persuasive support paper analyzing. In 2016, presence taken on substantially different role. evidence ever present personal.Secondary data coverage found perspective being developed Social websites/news apps presented Pew Research Center as substantial influence among citizen news sources When by age groups, youngest group is using information. Each older three groups shows decrease media.Recent political literature attempts explain increasing ways. need secure endorsements discussed literature. How party activists first fine tune before recruiting ordinary supporters presented. use identity based targeting through considered. Campaign finance aspects mentioned. activism, ideological involvement, informationalism stay with game decoupled cognition where vivid activate psychological motivating mechanisms reviewed. evolution small cyber-groups line used ICT. Use montage advertising provide voter's informational needs analogized assists voters quality public sphere voter choice factor Data propensity harmonious networks participate politics reported. Theories an extension citizens attitudes allow amplification beliefs Taken together these numerous explanations amplify paper's personal.

参考文章(12)
RYAN D. ENOS, EITAN D. HERSH, Party Activists as Campaign Advertisers: The Ground Campaign as a Principal-Agent Problem American Political Science Review. ,vol. 109, pp. 252- 278 ,(2015) , 10.1017/S0003055415000064
DAVID A. SIEGEL, Social Networks and the Mass Media American Political Science Review. ,vol. 107, pp. 786- 805 ,(2013) , 10.1017/S0003055413000452
ROBERT BOND, SOLOMON MESSING, Quantifying Social Media’s Political Space: Estimating Ideology from Publicly Revealed Preferences on Facebook American Political Science Review. ,vol. 109, pp. 62- 78 ,(2015) , 10.1017/S0003055414000525
MICHAEL BANG PETERSEN, LENE AARøe, Politics in the Mind's Eye: Imagination as a Link between Social and Political Cognition American Political Science Review. ,vol. 107, pp. 275- 293 ,(2013) , 10.1017/S0003055413000026
Jamie Warner, The Smugglers: The Rationality of Political Satire in the 2014 Elections PS Political Science & Politics. ,vol. 49, pp. 48- 52 ,(2016) , 10.1017/S1049096515001262
Kai Quek, Michael W. Sances, Closeness Counts: Increasing Precision and Reducing Errors in Mass Election Predictions Political Analysis. ,vol. 23, pp. 518- 533 ,(2015) , 10.1093/PAN/MPV022
Mark Chou, Roland Bleiker, Nilanjana Premaratna, Elections as Theater PS Political Science & Politics. ,vol. 49, pp. 43- 47 ,(2016) , 10.1017/S1049096515001225
Himanee Gupta-Carlson, Re-Imagining the Nation: Storytelling and Social Media in the Obama Campaigns PS: Political Science & Politics. ,vol. 49, pp. 71- 75 ,(2016) , 10.1017/S1049096515001274
Mirya R. Holman, Monica C. Schneider, Kristin Pondel, Gender Targeting in Political Advertisements Political Research Quarterly. ,vol. 68, pp. 816- 829 ,(2015) , 10.1177/1065912915605182
Michael Barber, Donation Motivations Testing Theories of Access and Ideology Political Research Quarterly. ,vol. 69, pp. 148- 159 ,(2016) , 10.1177/1065912915624164