Anatomy of audience duplication networks: How individual characteristics differentially contribute to fragmentation in news consumption and trust

Author:

Peng Yilang1ORCID,Yang Tian2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Georgia, USA

2. University of Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

While partisan selective exposure could drive audience fragmentation, other individual factors might also differentiate news diets. This study applies a method that disentangles the differential contributions of the individual characteristics to audience duplication networks. By analyzing a nationally representative survey about US adults’ media use in 2019 ( N = 12,043), we demonstrate that news fragmentation is driven by a myriad of individual factors, such as gender, race, and religiosity. Partisanship is still an important driver. We also distinguish between media exposure and media trust, showing that many cross-cutting ties in co-exposure networks disappear when media trust is considered. We conclude that audience fragmentation research should extend beyond ideological selectivity and additionally investigate how and why other individual-level preferences differentially contribute to fragmentation both in news exposure and in news trust.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Communication

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