6533b853fe1ef96bd12ad5b8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Digital Trace Data in the Study of Public Opinion

Harald SchoenOliver PoseggaPascal JürgensAndreas Jungherr

subject

business.industry05 social sciencesGeneral Social Sciences050801 communication & media studiesLibrary and Information SciencesPublic relationsPublic opinionPublic attention0506 political scienceComputer Science ApplicationsTest (assessment)Power (social and political)Trace (semiology)Politics0508 media and communicationsPolitical scienceddc:320050602 political science & public administrationComputational sociologybusinessLaw

description

In this article, we examine the relationship between metrics documenting politics-related Twitter activity with election results and trends in opinion polls. Various studies have proposed the possibility of inferring public opinion based on digital trace data collected on Twitter and even the possibility to predict election results based on aggregates of mentions of political actors. Yet, a systematic attempt at a validation of Twitter as an indicator for political support is lacking. In this article, building on social science methodology, we test the validity of the relationship between various Twitter-based metrics of public attention toward politics with election results and opinion polls. All indicators tested in this article suggest caution in the attempt to infer public opinion or predict election results based on Twitter messages. In all tested metrics, indicators based on Twitter mentions of political parties differed strongly from parties’ results in elections or opinion polls. This leads us to question the power of Twitter to infer levels of political support of political actors. Instead, Twitter appears to promise insights into temporal dynamics of public attention toward politics.

https://doi.org/10.1177/0894439316631043