Publication | Closed Access
First- and second-level agenda setting in the Twittersphere: An application to the Italian political debate
80
Citations
65
References
2016
Year
Social Medium MonitoringCommunication Social ChangePolitical ProcessPublic OpinionItalian StudiesPolitical BehaviorPolitical PolarizationCommunicationJournalismSocial SciencesSocial MediaMedia ActivismMedia EffectsSocial Medium NewsPolitical CommunicationSupervised Sentiment AnalysisContent AnalysisSecond-level Agenda SettingSocial Medium MiningMedia InstitutionsComparative PoliticsMedia PoliciesSocial Medium IntelligenceSocial Network SitesPolitical CampaignsPolitical AgendaItalian Political DebateMass CommunicationArtsSocial Medium DataPolitical Science
The rise of social network sites reopened the debate on the ability of traditional media to influence public opinion and act as an agenda setter. To answer this question, the present paper investigates first-level and second-level agenda-setting effects in the online environment by focusing on two heated Italian political debates (the reform of public funding of parties and the debate over austerity). By employing innovative and efficient statistical methods such as the lead–lag analysis and supervised sentiment analysis, we compare the attention devoted to each issue and the content spread by online news media and Twitter users. Our results show that online media keep their first-level agenda-setting power even though we find a marked difference between the slant of online news and the Twitter sentiment.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1