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RESEARCH PRODUCT
We are the people and you are fake news: a social identity approach to populist citizens’ false consensus and hostile media perceptions
Philipp MüllerAnne SchulzWerner Wirthsubject
media_common.quotation_subjectsocial identity theoryhostile media perceptions050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologySocial identity approachPublic opinion0508 media and communications10240 Department of Communication and Media ResearchPerceptionlanguage and linguisticsMainstream0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologySocial identity theorypopulist attitudesNews media070 News media journalism & publishing1203 Language and Linguisticsmedia_commonbusiness.industrycommunication05 social sciencesMedia studieslinguistics and languagepopulismPopulism3310 Linguistics and Languagefalse consensusFake newsbusiness3315 Communicationdescription
This study aims to investigate the relationships between citizens’ populist attitudes, perceptions of public opinion, and perceptions of mainstream news media. Relying on social identity theory as an explanatory framework, this article argues that populist citizens assume that public opinion is congruent with their own opinion and that mainstream media reporting is hostile toward their own views. To date, only anecdotal evidence suggests that both assumptions are true. The relationships are investigated in a cross-sectional survey with samples drawn from four Western European countries ( N = 3,354). Multigroup regression analysis supports our hypotheses: False consensus and hostile media perceptions can clearly be linked to populist attitudes in all four regions under investigation. Moreover, our findings show a gap between hostile media perceptions and congruent public opinion perceptions, which increases with increasing populist attitudes to the point that the persuasive press inference mechanism is annulled.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-08-21 |