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Shared partisanship dramatically increases social tie formation in a Twitter field experiment

Political Science

Shared partisanship dramatically increases social tie formation in a Twitter field experiment

M. Mosleh, C. Martel, et al.

Americans are far more likely to connect with copartisans — but is party identity the cause? In a Twitter field experiment, users were roughly three times more likely to follow-back bots whose partisanship matched their own, with no asymmetry between Democrats and Republicans. Research conducted by Mohsen Mosleh, Cameron Martel, Dean Eckles, and David G. Rand.... show more
Abstract
Americans are much more likely to be socially connected to copartisans, both in daily life and on social media. However, this observation does not necessarily mean that shared partisanship per se drives social tie formation, because partisanship is confounded with many other factors. Here, we test the causal effect of shared partisanship on the formation of social ties in a field experiment on Twitter. We created bot accounts that self-identified as people who favored the Democratic or Republican party and that varied in the strength of that identification. We then randomly assigned 842 Twitter users to be followed by one of our accounts. Users were roughly three times more likely to reciprocally follow-back bots whose partisanship matched their own, and this was true regardless of the bot’s strength of identification. Interestingly, there was no partisan asymmetry in this preferential follow-back behavior: Democrats and Republicans alike were much more likely to reciprocate follows from copartisans. These results demonstrate a strong causal effect of shared partisanship on the formation of social ties in an ecologically valid field setting and have important implications for political psychology, social media, and the politically polarized state of the American public.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
Published On
Feb 09, 2021
Authors
Mohsen Mosleh, Cameron Martel, Dean Eckles, David G. Rand
Tags
partisan homophily
social tie formation
field experiment
Twitter
reciprocal follows
causal effect
political polarization
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