Affiliation:
1. LMU Munich, Munich, Germany
2. University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Abstract
Politicians’ reticence to communicate their views clearly increases the information asymmetry between them and the electorate. This study tested the potential of subtle ideological cues to redress the balance. By spotlighting visual rather than the already much-examined verbal cues, we sought to contribute to building theory on cue effects. Specifically, we aimed to determine whether the effects from the literature on verbal cues could also be shown for visual ones. We used an experiment ( N = 361) to test the effects of subtle backdrop cues (SBCs), that is, of visual cues to ideology embedded in the background of political images. We manipulated photos of a fictitious politician to include liberal or conservative SBCs. We embedded these images in Twitter posts and tested whether they influenced perceptions of the politician’s ideology and the intention to vote for him. We analyzed the relationship between exposure to SBCs, the politician’s perceived political ideology, and voting intention—including the study of conditional effects elicited by cue awareness and ideological consistency between the depicted politician and participant. The conditional process analysis suggested that SBCs mattered, as they influenced citizens’ perceptions of a politician’s political ideology, and consequently, voting intention. These effects were moderated by cue awareness and ideological consistency. We concluded that SBCs can elicit substantial effects and that their use by politicians is paying off.
Funder
ludwig-maximilians-universität münchen
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Communication
Cited by
14 articles.
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1. Effects of Visual Framing in Multimodal Media Environments: A Systematic Review of Studies Between 1979 and 2023;Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly;2024-07-24
2. Visuals as Identity Markers in Political Communication on Social Media: Evidence for Effects of Visual Cues in Liberals, but Not in Conservatives;Mass Communication and Society;2024-04-05
3. Seeing “Us” and “Them”: How Political Symbols Polarize Through Anger, Anxiety, and Enthusiasm;Mass Communication and Society;2024-02-29
4. Automated Visual Analysis for the Study of Social Media Effects: Opportunities, Approaches, and Challenges;Communication Methods and Measures;2023-11-23
5. Political Populism: Handbook of Concepts, Questions and Strategies of Research, edited by Reinhard Heinisch, Christina Holtz-Bacha, and Oscar Mazzoleni. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, 2021, 595 pp.;Journal of Political Science: Bulletin of Yerevan University;2023-09-29