Is the MENA Surfing to the Extremes? Digital and Social Media, Echo Chambers/Filter Bubbles, and Attitude Extremity

Authors

  • Kevin M. Wagner Florida Atlantic University
  • Jason Gainous University of Louisville
  • Allison Warnersmith University of Louisville
  • Dane Warner University of Louisville

Keywords:

digital communication, social media, political communication, attitude extremity, Middle East and Northern Africa, polarization

Abstract

Research suggests that people are motivated to avoid information that challenges their predispositions. They seek out attitude-consistent information, leading to more extreme attitudes. While research suggests that the Internet facilitates this selective exposure more easily than traditional media, there is little evidence that it contributes to issue attitude extremity, and even less outside the Western context. We seek to fill that gap using survey data from the Arab Barometer. Our results indicate that digital information consumption consistently predicts issue attitude extremity, but some part of that relationship is mediated by political attentiveness. These results have tangible implications for understanding the complex relationship between public opinion and governance in societies with limited or absent democratic structures.

Author Biographies

Kevin M. Wagner, Florida Atlantic University

Chair and Professor of Political ScienceHe has published two coauthored books, one with Oxford University Press (Tweeting to Power: The Social Media Revolution in American Politics) and one with Rowman and Littlefield (Rebooting American Politics: The Internet Revolution). He has also published various articles in journals including Journal of Information Technology & Politics, Online Information Review, Politics & Policy, and Social Science Quarterly among others.

Jason Gainous, University of Louisville

Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education and ProfessorDr. Jason Gainous’ research focuses on information technology and politics. He has published two books, one with Oxford University Press (Tweeting to Power: The Social Media Revolution in American Politics) and one with Rowman and Littlefield (Rebooting American Politics: The Internet Revolution). He has also published various articles in journals including American Politics Research, Democratization, Information, Communication and Society, International Journal of Press/Politics, International Journal of Communication, Journal of Information Technology & Politics, Political Behavior, Political Research Quarterly, Political Communication, Social Science Quarterly, and Statistical Science among others.His research has won awards from the American Political Science Association, the Kentucky Political Science Association, the Southwestern Social Science Association, and the Florida Political Science Association. The University of Louisville has also honored him with their most prestigious award for research as well as their most prestigious award for teaching. Dr. Gainous is also the Co-Editor in Chief of the Journal of Information Technology & Politics.

Allison Warnersmith, University of Louisville

Former Graduate StudentAllison Warnersmith holds a Master's of Arts degree in political science from the University of Louisville.

Dane Warner, University of Louisville

Former Graduate StudentDane Warner holds a Master's of Arts degree in political science from the University of Louisville.

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Published

2022-12-29

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Articles