| Literature DB >> 27218659 |
Linda Bos1, Sanne Kruikemeier1, Claes de Vreese1.
Abstract
Recent research suggests that more and more citizens select news and information that is congruent with their existing political preferences. This increase in political selective exposure (PSE) has allegedly led to an increase in polarization. The vast majority of studies stem from the US case with a particular media and political system. We contend that there are good reasons to believe PSE is less prevalent in other systems. We test this using latent profile analysis with national survey data from the Netherlands (n = 2,833). We identify four types of media use profiles and indeed only find partial evidence of PSE. In particular, we find that public broadcasting news cross-cuts all cleavages. This research note offers an important antidote in what is considered a universal phenomenon. We do find, however, a relatively large segment of citizens opting out of news consumption despite the readily available news in today's media landscape.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27218659 PMCID: PMC4878755 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Most popular News and Current Affairs Sources.
For parsimonious reasons we only presented one outlet within the main television news categories. The results are similar for other outlets within the same category, and available from the authors upon request. Public News broadcast = NOS Journaal, Commercial news broadcast = Hart van Nederland, similar results for RTL Nieuws, Right-wing satirical news show = Pownews, Public Infotainment program = DWDD, Public current affairs program = Nieuwsuur, similar results for Pauw & Witteman and EénVandaag; Commercial talkshow = RTL Late Night; Free daily = Metro, similar results for Sp!ts; online news = nu.nl, similar results for newspapers online and “other news websites” Bars show exposure to each outlet in average number of days per week (Mean), error bars show standard deviation, labels show percentage of respondents indicating they use source at least once per week.
Exposure to news sources, related to party preference.
| Socialists | Greens | Soc-Dem | Social Liberals | Christ-Dem | Liberals | Right-Wing populists | Abstain | DK | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Public news broadcast | 3.18 (2.60) | 3.42 (2.66) | 3.29 (2.74 | |||||||
| 76,15% | 80,52% | 74,69% | ||||||||
| Commercial news broadcast | 1.53 (2.17) | 1.30 (2.12) | 1.47 (2.10) | 1.44 (2.13) | 1.53 (2.20) | |||||
| 47,40% | 47,11% | 48,20% | 46,64% | 46,10% | ||||||
| Public Infotainment program | 1.84 (2.12) | 1.48 (1.93) | 1.50 (1.85) | 1.51 (1.97) | ||||||
| 57,14% | 50,22% | 54,13% | 49,81% | |||||||
| Public current affairs program | 1.49 (1.98) | 1.40 (1.82) | 1.31 (1.91) | |||||||
| 49,35% | 44,48% | |||||||||
| Commercial talkshow | 1.03 (1.60) | 0.98 (1.51) | 1.09 (1.52) | 0.97 (1.57) | 1.09 (1.62) | 0.91 (1.74) | 1.10 (1.60) | 1.05 (1.66) | ||
| 40,37% | 38,63% | 39,11% | 42,20% | 42,22% | 42,46% | 39,64% | ||||
| Satirical news show | 0.51 (1.24) | 0.34 (1.10) | 0.48 (1.08) | 0.42 (1.16) | 0.46 (1.10) | 0.45 (1.13) | ||||
| 20,49% | 21,89% | 16,54% | 16,00% | 21,10% | 17,17% | 18,92% | ||||
| Telegraaf | 0.85 (1.97) | 0.86 (2.00) | 1.02 (2.18) | 0.90 (2.08) | 0.90 (2.09) | 0.99 (2.12) | ||||
| 20,18% | 19,92% | 23,11% | 20,27% | 19,95% | 22,56% | |||||
| NRC/NEXT | 0.15 (0.60) | 0.28 (0.93) | 0.19 (0.67) | 0.20 (0.76) | ||||||
| 7,65% | 12,45% | 10,67% | 9,07% | |||||||
| AD | 0.83 (2.03) | 0.57 (1.73) | 0.89 (2.00) | 0.69 (1.73) | 0.95 (2.14) | 0.80 (1.96) | 0.88 (1.97) | 0.76 (1.88) | ||
| 17,13% | 11,69% | 21,46% | 17,29% | 17,43% | 20,49% | 17,58% | ||||
| Volkskrant | 0.51 (1.55) | 0.40 (1.34) | 0.36 (1.32) | 0.41 (1.40) | ||||||
| 13,46% | 11,11% | 9,17% | 10,66% | |||||||
| Free daily | 0.47 (1.19) | 0.60 (1.26) | 0.60 (1.28) | 0.45 (1.19) | 0.40 (1.13) | 0.52 (1.39) | 0.40 (1.11) | 0.49 (1.25) | ||
| 18,65% | 27,27% | 18,05% | 15,90% | 17,57% | 16,24% | 18,78% | ||||
| Regional Newspaper | 2.40 (2.69) | 2.03 (2.46) | 2.28 (2.52) | 2.33 (2.65) | 2.03 (2.60) | 2.12 (2.55) | ||||
| 57,80% | 54,55% | 58,65% | 55,35% | |||||||
| Online news | 2.19 (2.74) | 2.32 (2.64) | 2.60 (2.71) | 2.05 (2.66) | 2.02 (2.64) | 2.26 (2.73) | ||||
| 50,76% | 57,14% | 48,44% | 48,49% | 51,82% | ||||||
| N | 327 | 77 | 233 | 266 | 225 | 327 | 405 | 222 | 431 |
Media exposure per profile: average number of days per week.
| minimalists | public news consumers | popular news consumers | omnivores | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Public News broadcast | 3.39 (2.69) | 3.29 (2.74) | |||
| 75.4% | 74.7% | ||||
| Commercial News broadcast | 1.49 (2.17) | 1.53 (2.20) | |||
| 45.1% | 46.1% | ||||
| Public infotainment program | 1.77 (2.01) | 1.51 (1.97) | |||
| 49.8% | |||||
| Public current affairs program | 1.26 (1.92) | 1.31 (1.91) | |||
| 41.4% | 44.5% | ||||
| Commercial talk show | 1.29 (1.88) | 0.90 (1.57) | 1.05 (1.66) | ||
| 44.5% | 34.3% | 39.6% | |||
| Satirical news show | 0.61 (1.32) | 0.45 (1.13) | |||
| 25.3% | 18.9% | ||||
| De Telegraaf | 1.25 (2.31) | 0.99 (2.12) | |||
| 27.1% | 22.6% | ||||
| Algemeen Dagblad | 0.76 (1.88) | ||||
| 17.6% | |||||
| de Volkskrant | 0.41 (1.40) | ||||
| 10.7% | |||||
| NRC / nrc.nxt | 0.26 (0.83) | 0.20 (0.76) | |||
| 12.0% | 9.1% | ||||
| Free daily | 0.49 (1.25) | ||||
| 18.8% | |||||
| Regional newspaper | 2.03 (2.32) | 2.43 (2.56) | 2.12 (2.55) | ||
| 55.3% | |||||
| Online news | 2.19 (2.74) | 2.28 (2.67) | 2.44 (2.70) | 2.26 (2.73) | |
| 49.9% | 53.6% | 57.1% | 51.8% |
First row: Average number of days per week in cells; standard deviations in parentheses. Second row: percentage of respondents in profile that is exposed to the source at least once per week. Bold numbers indicate a higher use than the sample average, italic numbers indicate lesser usage than the sample average; tested with one sample t-tests, p < 0.05.
Predictors of media profiles, multinomial regression analysis with minimalists as reference category (unstandardized regression coefficients).
| Public news consumers | Popular news consumers | Omnivores | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | -0.05 | -0.30 | -0.23 |
| Age | 0.06 | -0.01 | 0.03 |
| Education | 0.01 | -0.12 | 0.37 |
| Political Interest | 0.43 | 0.18 | 0.54 |
| Socialists | 0.14 | 0.28 | 0.52 |
| Greens | -0.18 | 0.73 | 1.25 |
| Social democrats | -0.13 | 0.70 | 1.11 |
| Social liberals | -0.05 | 0.27 | 0.15 |
| Christian democrats | -0.25 | 0.01 | -0.26 |
| Liberals | -0.13 | -0.03 | -0.32 |
| Right-wing populists | -0.19 | 0.84 | -1.91 |
| Non-voters | -0.13 | 0.48 | -0.99 |
| Constant | -5.91 | -1.93 | -8.05 |
| Log Likelihood | -2245.18 | ||
| Pseudo explained variance | 16.84% |
* = p > 0.05
** = p > 0.01
*** = p > 0.001. Coefficients for the small Christian parties, Animal Party, and Senior Party (50Plus) not shown here; n = 2833.