{"title":"Replicating the effects of Facebook deactivation in an ethnically polarized setting","authors":"Nejla Asimovic, Jonathan Nagler, Joshua A. Tucker","doi":"10.1177/20531680231205157","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The question of how social media usage impacts societal polarization continues to generate great interest among both the research community and broader public. Nevertheless, there are still very few rigorous empirical studies of the causal impact of social media usage on polarization. To explore this question, we replicate the only published study to date that tests the effects of social media cessation on interethnic attitudes (Asimovic et al., 2021). In a study situated in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the authors found that deactivating from Facebook for a week around genocide commemoration in Bosnia and Herzegovina had a negative effect on users’ attitudes toward ethnic outgroups, with the negative effect driven by users with more ethnically homogenous offline networks. Does this finding extend to other settings? In a pre-registered replication study, we implement the same research design in a different ethnically polarized setting: Cyprus. We are not able to replicate the main effect found in Asimovic et al. (2021): in Cyprus, we cannot reject the null hypothesis of no effect. We do, however, find a significant interaction between the heterogeneity of users’ offline networks and the deactivation treatment within our 2021 subsample, consistent with the pattern from Bosnia and Herzegovina. We also find support for recent findings (Allcott et al., 2020; Asimovic et al., 2021) that Facebook deactivation leads to a reduction in anxiety levels and suggestive evidence of a reduction in knowledge of current news, though the latter is again limited to our 2021 subsample.","PeriodicalId":21062,"journal":{"name":"Research & Politics","volume":"121 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Research & Politics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/20531680231205157","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The question of how social media usage impacts societal polarization continues to generate great interest among both the research community and broader public. Nevertheless, there are still very few rigorous empirical studies of the causal impact of social media usage on polarization. To explore this question, we replicate the only published study to date that tests the effects of social media cessation on interethnic attitudes (Asimovic et al., 2021). In a study situated in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the authors found that deactivating from Facebook for a week around genocide commemoration in Bosnia and Herzegovina had a negative effect on users’ attitudes toward ethnic outgroups, with the negative effect driven by users with more ethnically homogenous offline networks. Does this finding extend to other settings? In a pre-registered replication study, we implement the same research design in a different ethnically polarized setting: Cyprus. We are not able to replicate the main effect found in Asimovic et al. (2021): in Cyprus, we cannot reject the null hypothesis of no effect. We do, however, find a significant interaction between the heterogeneity of users’ offline networks and the deactivation treatment within our 2021 subsample, consistent with the pattern from Bosnia and Herzegovina. We also find support for recent findings (Allcott et al., 2020; Asimovic et al., 2021) that Facebook deactivation leads to a reduction in anxiety levels and suggestive evidence of a reduction in knowledge of current news, though the latter is again limited to our 2021 subsample.
社交媒体的使用如何影响社会两极分化的问题继续引起研究界和广大公众的极大兴趣。然而,关于社交媒体使用对两极分化的因果影响的严谨实证研究仍然很少。为了探索这个问题,我们复制了迄今为止唯一发表的研究,该研究测试了社交媒体停止对种族间态度的影响(Asimovic等人,2021)。在一项位于波斯尼亚和黑塞哥维那的研究中,作者发现,在波斯尼亚和黑塞哥维那的种族灭绝纪念活动期间停用Facebook一周,会对用户对种族外群体的态度产生负面影响,而这种负面影响是由拥有更多种族同质化线下网络的用户推动的。这一发现是否适用于其他情况?在一项预先注册的复制研究中,我们在一个不同的种族极化环境中实施了相同的研究设计:塞浦路斯。我们无法复制Asimovic等人(2021)中发现的主要效应:在塞浦路斯,我们无法拒绝无效应的原假设。然而,我们确实发现,在我们的2021子样本中,用户离线网络的异质性与失活处理之间存在显著的相互作用,这与波斯尼亚和黑塞哥维那的模式一致。我们还发现了对最近发现的支持(Allcott et al., 2020;Asimovic et al., 2021), Facebook停用导致焦虑水平降低,并暗示对当前新闻知识的了解减少,尽管后者再次局限于我们的2021子样本。