How do social media feed algorithms affect attitudes and behavior in an election campaign?

Authors
  • A.M. Guess
  • N. Malhotra
  • J. Pan
  • P. Barberá
  • H. Allcott
  • T. Brown
  • A. Crespo-Tenorio
  • D. Dimmery
  • D. Freelon
  • M. Gentzkow
  • S. González-Bailón
  • E. Kennedy
  • Y.M. Kim
  • D. Lazer
  • D. Moehler
  • B. Nyhan
  • C.V. Rivera
  • J. Settle
  • D.R. Thomas
  • E. Thorson
  • R. Tromble
  • A. Wilkins
  • M. Wojcieszak
  • B. Xiong
  • C. Kiewiet de Jonge
  • A. Franco
  • W. Mason
  • N.J. Stroud
  • J.A. Tucker
Publication date 28-07-2023
Journal Science
Volume | Issue number 381 | 6656
Pages (from-to) 398-404
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
We investigated the effects of Facebook's and Instagram's feed algorithms during the 2020 US election. We assigned a sample of consenting users to reverse-chronologically-ordered feeds instead of the default algorithms. Moving users out of algorithmic feeds substantially decreased the time they spent on the platforms and their activity. The chronological feed also affected exposure to content: The amount of political and untrustworthy content they saw increased on both platforms, the amount of content classified as uncivil or containing slur words they saw decreased on Facebook, and the amount of content from moderate friends and sources with ideologically mixed audiences they saw increased on Facebook. Despite these substantial changes in users' on-platform experience, the chronological feed did not significantly alter levels of issue polarization, affective polarization, political knowledge, or other key attitudes during the 3-month study period.
Document type Article
Note With Supplementary Materials
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abp9364
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