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Large-scale quantitative evidence of media impact on public opinion toward China

Political Science

Large-scale quantitative evidence of media impact on public opinion toward China

J. Huang, G. G. Cook, et al.

This study, conducted by Junming Huang, Gavin G. Cook, and Yu Xie, delves into the significant role of mass media, specifically The New York Times, in shaping public opinion about China. Analyzing nearly 268,000 articles, the research reveals a striking correlation: NYT reporting accounts for 54% of the variance in American public perception of China the following year.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Do mass media influence people's opinions of other countries? Using BERT, a deep neural network-based natural language processing model, this study analyzes a large corpus of 267,907 China-related articles published by The New York Times since 1970. The output from The New York Times is then compared to a longitudinal data set constructed from 101 cross-sectional surveys of the American public's views on China, revealing that the reporting of The New York Times on China in one year explains 54% of the variance in American public opinion on China in the next. This result confirms hypothesized links between media and public opinion and helps shed light on how mass media can influence the public opinion of foreign countries.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jul 26, 2021
Authors
Junming Huang, Gavin G. Cook, Yu Xie
Tags
mass media
public opinion
China
New York Times
BERT
natural language processing
foreign countries
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