TY - JOUR
T1 - The distraction effect. Political and entertainment-oriented content on social media, political participation, interest, and knowledge
AU - Matthes, Jörg
AU - Heiss, Raffael
AU - van Scharrel, Hendrik
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors
PY - 2023/5
Y1 - 2023/5
N2 - There are grounds to assume that the use of nonpolitical, entertainment-oriented Social Media (SM) may dampen democratically relevant outcomes. However, research has largely ignored the political effects of such entertainment-oriented SM content as well as its interaction with exposure to political SM content. Based on the distinction between political and entertainment-oriented SM use, we developed a fourfold theoretical typology, “the Inactive”, “the News Avoiders”, “the Distracted”, and “the Focused”. Using data from a two-wave panel study (N = 559), we found that “the Focused” scored highest while the “the Inactive” and the “the News Avoiders” scored lowest on democratically relevant outcomes. Autoregressive panel analyses further revealed a positive effect of political SM exposure on low-effort political participation, but not on high-effort participation, political interest, and knowledge over time. Exposure to entertainment-oriented content on SM was associated with a decrease in high-effort political participation over time. For low-effort participation and political interest, the over-time effect of political SM exposure was dampened with rising levels of entertainment-oriented SM exposure, suggesting a distraction effect. Implications are discussed.
AB - There are grounds to assume that the use of nonpolitical, entertainment-oriented Social Media (SM) may dampen democratically relevant outcomes. However, research has largely ignored the political effects of such entertainment-oriented SM content as well as its interaction with exposure to political SM content. Based on the distinction between political and entertainment-oriented SM use, we developed a fourfold theoretical typology, “the Inactive”, “the News Avoiders”, “the Distracted”, and “the Focused”. Using data from a two-wave panel study (N = 559), we found that “the Focused” scored highest while the “the Inactive” and the “the News Avoiders” scored lowest on democratically relevant outcomes. Autoregressive panel analyses further revealed a positive effect of political SM exposure on low-effort political participation, but not on high-effort participation, political interest, and knowledge over time. Exposure to entertainment-oriented content on SM was associated with a decrease in high-effort political participation over time. For low-effort participation and political interest, the over-time effect of political SM exposure was dampened with rising levels of entertainment-oriented SM exposure, suggesting a distraction effect. Implications are discussed.
KW - Entertainment
KW - Political interest
KW - Political knowledge
KW - Political learning
KW - Political participation
KW - Social Media
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146434171&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.chb.2022.107644
DO - 10.1016/j.chb.2022.107644
M3 - Article
SN - 0747-5632
VL - 142
JO - Computers in Human Behavior
JF - Computers in Human Behavior
M1 - 107644
ER -