Replication data for: Measure for Measure: An Experimental Test of Online Political Media Exposure (doi:10.7910/DVN/25520)

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Part 2: Study Description
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Document Description

Citation

Title:

Replication data for: Measure for Measure: An Experimental Test of Online Political Media Exposure

Identification Number:

doi:10.7910/DVN/25520

Distributor:

Harvard Dataverse

Date of Distribution:

2014-05-02

Version:

1

Bibliographic Citation:

Guess, Andrew, 2014, "Replication data for: Measure for Measure: An Experimental Test of Online Political Media Exposure", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/25520, Harvard Dataverse, V1

Study Description

Citation

Title:

Replication data for: Measure for Measure: An Experimental Test of Online Political Media Exposure

Identification Number:

doi:10.7910/DVN/25520

Authoring Entity:

Guess, Andrew (Columbia University)

Producer:

Political Analysis

Distributor:

Harvard Dataverse

Distributor:

IQSS Dataverse Network

Date of Deposit:

2014-04-15

Holdings Information:

https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/25520

Study Scope

Keywords:

media, Internet, exposure, measurement, Turk

Abstract:

Self-reported measures of media exposure are plagued with error and questions about validity. Since they are essential to studying media effects, a substantial literature has explored the shortcomings of these measures, tested proxies, and proposed refinements. But lacking an objective baseline, such investigations can only make relative comparisons. By focusing specifically on recent Internet activity stored by web browsers, this paper's methodology captures individuals' actual consumption of political media. Using experiments embedded within an online survey, I test three different measures of media exposure and compare them to the actual exposure. I find that open-ended survey prompts reduce overreporting and generate an accurate picture of the overall audience for online news. I also show that they predict news recall at least as well as general knowledge. Together, these results demonstrate that some ways of asking questions about media use are better than others. I conclude with a discussion of survey-based exposure measures for online political information and the applicability of this paper's direct method of exposure measurement for future studies.

Methodology and Processing

Sources Statement

Data Access

Notes:

<a href="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0</a>

Other Study Description Materials

Related Publications

Citation

Title:

Guess, Andrew. 2014. "Measure for Measure: An Experimental Test of Online Political Media Exposure." Political Analysis, In Press. <a href= "link to article" target= "_new">article available here</a>

Bibliographic Citation:

Guess, Andrew. 2014. "Measure for Measure: An Experimental Test of Online Political Media Exposure." Political Analysis, In Press. <a href= "link to article" target= "_new">article available here</a>

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

M4Mdata.zip

Text:

Data files and code to replicate tables and figures in the paper

Notes:

application/zip