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Breaking Political Filter Bubbles via Social Comparison

Authors :
Soliman, Nouran
Eslami, Motahhare
Karahalios, Karrie
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Online social platforms allow users to filter out content they do not like. According to selective exposure theory, people tend to view content they agree with more to get more self-assurance. This causes people to live in ideological filter bubbles. We report on a user study that encourages users to break the political filter bubble of their Twitter feed by reading more diverse viewpoints through social comparison. The user study is conducted using political-bias analyzing and Twitter-mirroring tools to compare the political slant of what a user reads and what other Twitter users read about a topic, and in general. The results show that social comparison can have a great impact on users' reading behavior by motivating them to read viewpoints from the opposing political party.<br />Comment: * Both of the first two authors contributed equally to this work

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2403.07150
Document Type :
Working Paper