Study shows your media habits are linked to your voter participation
In 2016, 43-percent of the eligible voting population chose not to cast a ballot. That鈥檚 roughly 100 million adults who decided to stay home on election day.
The big question is why?
Jesse Holcomb, a professor of聽journalism 补苍诲听communication at 黄大仙高手论坛 is determined to help discover the answer to that question.
Today, he and his co-investigators, Taylor Hartson 鈥19 a research specialist with the聽Center for Social Research at 黄大仙高手论坛 and Matthew Bone 鈥20, published a report that digs deep into non-voters鈥 news diets to explore the role that the media plays in their views toward voting. It marks the third media-related research project that the three have worked on together in recent years.
鈥淭his report was using data from the bigger 100 million project,鈥 said Holcomb, 鈥渟o we took another bite out of the apple.鈥
罢丑别听 was commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, a premier American philanthropic organization dedicated to journalism and civic life. The project surveyed 12,000 American non-voters to understand why they don鈥檛 vote. It was an attempt to understand their behaviors and attitudes.
Using the data from this broader project, Holcomb and his team made some key discoveries.
鈥淲e found that not all non-voters are alike when it comes to their media habits and their different media habits have potentially significant implications for their likeliness to vote in November,鈥 said Holcomb. 鈥淥ne in three non-voters pay a lot of attention to the news, and these non-voters are more likely than other non-voters to say they are going to vote in the fall. So, the relationship of paying attention to the news might make them more likely to vote.鈥
Holcomb鈥檚 team also found that non-voters whose main sources of news is social media are less likely to vote in the future and also less likely to think that voting is going to make a difference. While Holcomb says the data doesn鈥檛 reveal with certainty the 鈥渨hy,鈥 he offers some informed speculation.
鈥淲e do know from other research that social media lends itself to be very casual information, grazing. People who read newspapers will be civically engaged and are more likely to vote. They鈥檙e getting a more concentrated dose of public affairs reporting,鈥 said Holcomb. 鈥淥n the other hand, in social media you have an ambient news experience, it鈥檚 a lean back experience as opposed to a lean forward, you don鈥檛 seek news, you happen to bump into news there.鈥
鈥淎nother reason is that we know that social media is like a hall of mirrors, it鈥檚 hard to know what is true, what is not, and social media platforms tend to amplify misinformation in ways other news sources don鈥檛 always do. So, a negative news experience, might be a turn off. Again, the data from this study isn鈥檛 crystal clear on this, though other research supports these explanations.鈥
But what is crystal clear is having a deeper understanding of news media habits of non-voters can and should provide insight into how to create a path for more non-voters to get to the ballot box in 2020 and beyond.
鈥淭he fact is fewer than 1 in 10 non-voters prefer newspaper content, either online or in print. More and more non-voters are spending time with social media and I don鈥檛 see that changing anytime soon,鈥 said Holcomb. 鈥淚 would suggest news editors, publishers, and reporters use their efforts to meet non-voters where they are at. Rather than try to get them to their traditional platforms, it is important for them to inhabit social platforms and try to make them healthier information environments.鈥
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