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Blocking of counter-partisan accounts drives political assortment on Twitter

Political Science

Blocking of counter-partisan accounts drives political assortment on Twitter

C. Martel, M. Mosleh, et al.

Field experiments on Twitter reveal that political assortment isn't just due to homophily—people also actively prevent cross-partisan ties by blocking. Using human-like bot accounts, users were 12 times more likely to block counter-partisan accounts in the first study and 4 times more likely in the second versus neutral or copartisan accounts. A survey replication showed blocking often aims to avoid seeing content, with Democrats blocking counter-partisans more due to low-quality or slanted posts. Research conducted by Cameron Martel, Mohsen Mosleh, Qi Yang, Tauhid Zaman, and David G. Rand.... show more
Abstract
There is strong political assortment of Americans on social media networks. This is typically attributed to preferential tie formation (i.e. homophily) among those with shared partisanship. Here, we demonstrate an additional factor beyond homophily driving assorted networks: preferential prevention of social ties. In two field experiments on Twitter, we created human-looking bot accounts that identified as Democrats or Republicans, and then randomly assigned users to be followed by one of these accounts. In addition to preferentially following-back copartisans, we found that users were 12 times more likely to block counter-partisan accounts compared to copartisan accounts in the first experiment, and 4 times more likely to block counter-partisan accounts relative to a neutral account or a copartisan account in the second experiment. We then replicated these findings in a survey experiment and found evidence of a key motivation for blocking: wanting to avoid seeing any content posted by the blocked user. Additionally, we found that Democrats preferentially blocked counter-partisans more than Republicans, and that this asymmetry was likely due to blocking accounts who post low-quality or politically slanted content (rather than an asymmetry in identity-based blocking). Our results demonstrate that preferential blocking of counter-partisans is an important phenomenon driving political assortment on social media.
Publisher
PNAS Nexus
Published On
Apr 15, 2024
Authors
Cameron Martel, Mohsen Mosleh, Qi Yang, Tauhid Zaman, David G. Rand
Tags
political assortment
blocking behavior
homophily
Twitter field experiments
partisan asymmetry
content avoidance
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