"I always feel like somebody's watching me"

Rachel Gibson, Esmeralda Bon, Katherine Dommett
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Abstract

The practice of political micro-targeting (PMT) – tailoring messages for voters based on their personal data – has increased over the past two decades, particularly in the U.S. Studies of PMT have to date concentrated largely on its effects on voters, or its implications for democracy more broadly. Less attention has been given to answering basic descriptive questions about how people perceive, feel and care about this new mode of political communication. This paper fills that gap by reporting findings from an online survey (weighted to be nationally representative on age, gender, ethnicity, region and past vote) that measured public attitudes toward PMT during the 2020 U.S. Presidential campaign. Specifically, we measure voter orientations toward PMT in four key dimensions – awareness, aversion, knowledge, and acceptability at the aggregate level – and explore how these vary according to a range of individual characteristics. Key findings are that public understanding and acceptance of PMT may be higher than current studies indicate, particularly among certain sectors of the population. Such insights are important for academic research to cognize and also policy-makers, as they move toward greater regulation of voter targeting.
"我总觉得有人在监视我"
政治微定位(PMT)--根据选民的个人数据为其量身定制信息--的做法在过去二十年中有所增加,尤其是在美国。迄今为止,对PMT的研究主要集中在其对选民的影响,或其对更广泛的民主的影响。对于人们如何看待、感受和关心这种新的政治传播模式的基本描述性问题,人们关注较少。本文填补了这一空白,报告了一项在线调查(根据年龄、性别、种族、地区和以往投票情况加权,具有全国代表性)的结果,该调查测量了 2020 年美国总统竞选期间公众对 PMT 的态度。具体而言,我们从四个关键维度衡量了选民对 PMT 的取向--认识、厌恶、了解和总体可接受性--并探讨了这些取向如何随一系列个体特征而变化。主要发现是,公众对 PMT 的理解和接受程度可能高于目前的研究,尤其是在某些人群中。这些见解对学术研究和政策制定者都很重要,因为他们正朝着加强对选民定位的监管迈进。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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