Litcius/Paper detail

What Information Drives Political Polarization? Comparing the Effects of In-group Praise, Out-group Derogation, and Evidence-based Communications on Polarization

Magdalena Wojcieszak, Paweł Sobkowicz, Xudong Yu, Beril Bulat

2021The International Journal of Press/Politics19 citationsDOI

Abstract

This project differentiates between communication that praises one's political in-group ( in-group praise ), attacks the opposition ( out-group derogation ), or focuses on policy details ( evidence based ), testing their effects on network and attitude polarization. We begin with an agent-based model, which shows that congenial evidence-based exchanges polarize the network and the inclusion of identity-driven communications leads to greater polarization. Once out-group derogation reaches a certain threshold, the network of agents splits into two groups, yet the polarizing effects of in-group praise are yet stronger and emerge more rapidly (i.e., a lower threshold of in-group praise is needed to polarize the network). Using an experimental design on a sample of American partisans, we offer a partial validation of the model. In-group praise and out-group derogation polarize attitudes more than balanced evidence-based news, but not more than congenial evidence-based news. Identity-driven news also has no effects on affective polarization. This multidisciplinary evidence shows that the nature of political content matters.

Topics & Concepts

DerogationPraisePolarization (electrochemistry)PoliticsSocial psychologyPsychologyCollective identityPolitical scienceLawChemistryPhysical chemistryOpinion Dynamics and Social InfluenceSocial Media and PoliticsElectoral Systems and Political Participation