Social Media and the ‘Spiral of Silence’

Groupthink is alive and well. Social media is a trap. Social media allows the oligarchs to control, monitor and mislead the sheep. Bah.

Via Pew Research

 

Summary of Findings

A major insight into human behavior from pre-internet era studies of communication is the tendency of people not to speak up about policy issues in public—or among their family, friends, and work colleagues—when they believe their own point of view is not widely shared. This tendency is called the “spiral of silence.”1

Some social media creators and supporters have hoped that social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter might produce different enough discussion venues that those with minority views might feel freer to express their opinions, thus broadening public discourse and adding new perspectives to everyday discussion of political issues.

We set out to study this by conducting a survey of 1,801 adults.Americans were divided over whether the NSA contractor’s leaks about surveillance were justified and whether the surveillance policy itself was a good or bad idea. For instance, Pew Research found in one survey that 44% say the release of classified information harms the public interest while 49% said it serves the public interest.

The survey reported in this report sought people’s opinions about the Snowden leaks, their willingness to talk about the revelations in various in-person and online settings, and their perceptions of the views of those around them in a variety of online and off-line contexts.

This survey’s findings produced several major insights:

Overall, the findings indicate that in the Snowden case, social media did not provide new forums for those who might otherwise remain silent to express their opinions and debate issues. Further, if people thought their friends and followers in social media disagreed with them, they were less likely to say they would state their views on the Snowden-NSA story online and in other contexts, such as gatherings of friends, neighbors, or co-workers. This suggests a spiral of silence might spill over from online contexts to in-person contexts, though our data cannot definitively demonstrate this causation. It also might mean that the broad awareness social media users have of their networks might make them more hesitant to speak up because they are especially tuned into the opinions of those around them.

A rundown of the key survey findings:

People reported being less willing to discuss the Snowden-NSA story in social media than they were in person—and social media did not provide an alternative outlet for those reluctant to discuss the issues in person.

Fully 86% of Americans reported in the Pew Research survey they were “very” or “somewhat” willing to have a conversation about the government’s surveillance program in at least one of the physical settings we queried —at a public meeting, at a family dinner, at a restaurant with friends, or at work. Yet, only 42% of those who use Facebook or Twitter were willing to discuss these same issues through social media.

If the topic of the government surveillance programs came up in these settings, how willing would you be to join in the conversation?

Of the 14% of Americans who were not willing to discuss this issue in person, almost none (0.3%) said they were willing to have a conversation about this issue through social media. This challenges the notion that social media spaces might be considered useful venues for people sharing views they would not otherwise express when they are in the physical presence of others.

Not only were social media sites not an alternative forum for discussion, social media users were less willing to share their opinions in face-to-face settings.

We also did statistical modeling allowing us to more fully understand the findings by controlling for such things as gender, age, education levels, race, and marital status—all of which are related to whether people use social media and how they use it. That modeling allowed us to calculate how likely people were to be willing to express their views in these differing settings holding other things constant.3

The results of our analyses show that, even holding other factors such as age constant, social media users are less likely than others to say they would join a discussion about the Snowden-NSA revelations.

In both offline and online settings, people said they were more willing to share their views on the Snowden-NSA revelations if they thought their audience agreed with them.

Previous research has shown that when people decide whether to speak out about an issue, they rely on reference groups—friendships and community ties—to weigh their opinion relative to their peers. In the survey, we asked respondents about their sense of whether different groups of people in their lives agreed or disagreed with their positions on the Snowden leaks. There was some notable variance between those who feel they know the views of their peers and those who do not know what others think. Generally, the more socially close people were—e.g. spouses or family members—the more likely it was that the respondents felt their views matched.

To what extent do you think others agree with your views about the Snowden-NSA revelations?

We again calculated how likely it was that someone would be willing to share their views in different settings, depending on their sense of whether their audience agreed with them. We found that, in the case of Snowden’s revelations about the NSA, it was clear that if people felt their audience supported them, they were more likely to say they would join a conversation:

Those who do not feel that their Facebook friends or Twitter followers agree with their opinion are more likely to self-censor their views on the Snowden-NSA story in many circumstances—in social media and in face-to-face encounters.

In this survey on the Snowden-NSA matter, we found that when social media users felt their opinions were not supported online, they were less likely to say they would speak their minds . This was true not only in social media spaces, but also in the physical presence of others.

  • The average Facebook user (someone who uses the site a few times per day) was half as likely as other people to say they would be willing to voice their opinion with friends at a restaurant. If they felt that their online Facebook network agreed with their views on this issue, their willingness to speak out in a face-to-face discussion with friends was higher, although they were still only 0.74 times as likely to voice their opinion.
  • The typical Twitter user (who uses the site a few times per day) is 0.24 times as likely to share their opinions with colleagues at work as an internet user who does not use Twitter. However, Twitter users who felt that their online Twitter followers shared their opinion were less reserved: They were only 0.66 times less likely to speak up than other internet users.

The survey did not directly explore why people might remain silent if they felt that their opinions were in the minority. The traditional view of the spiral of silence is that people choose not to speak out for fear of isolation. Other Pew Research studies have found that it is common for social media users to be mistaken about their friends’ beliefs and to be surprised once they discover their friends’ actual views via social media. Thus, it might be the case that people do not want to disclose their minority views for fear of disappointing their friends, getting into fruitless arguments, or losing them entirely. Some people may prefer not to share their views on social media because their posts persist and can be found later—perhaps by prospective employers or others with high status. As to why the absence of agreement on social media platforms spills over into a spiral of silence in physical settings, we speculate that social media users may have witnessed those with minority opinions experiencing ostracism, ridicule or bullying online, and that this might increase the perceived risk of opinion sharing in other settings.

People also say they would speak up, or stay silent, under specific conditions.

In addition to exploring the impact of agreement/disagreement on whether people were willing to discuss the Snowden-NSA revelations, we asked about other factors that might shape whether people would speak out, even if they suspected they held minority views. This survey shows how the social and political climate in which people share opinions depends on several other things:

People’s use of social media did little to increase their access to information about the Snowden-NSA revelations.

We asked respondents where they were getting information about the debates swirling around the Snowden revelations, and found that social media was not a common source of news for most Americans. Traditional broadcast news sources were by far the most common sources. In contrast, social media sources like Facebook and Twitter were the least commonly identified sources for news on this issue.

There are limits to what this snapshot can tell us about how social media use is related to the ways Americans discuss important political issues. This study focuses on one specific public affairs issue that was of interest to most Americans: the Snowden-NSA revelations. It is not an exhaustive review of all public policy issues and the way they are discussed in social media.

The context of the Snowden-NSA story may also have made it somewhat different from other kinds of public debates. At the time of this study, the material leaked by Edward Snowden related to NSA monitoring of communications dealt specifically with “meta-data” collected on people’s phone and internet communications. For a phone call, the meta-data collected by the NSA was described as including the duration of the call, when it happened, the numbers the call was between, but not a recording of the call. For email, meta-data would have included the sender and recipient’s email addresses and when it was sent, but not the subject or text of the email.

Additional information leaked by Snowden after our study was completed suggests that Western intelligence agencies monitored and manipulated the content of online discussions and the NSA recorded the content of foreign phone calls. In reaction to these additional revelations, people may have adjusted their use of social media and their willingness to discuss a range of topics, including public issues such as government surveillance. However, given the limited extent of the information leaked by Snowden at the time the survey was fielded, it seems unlikely that the average American had extensively altered their willingness to discuss political issues. Future research may provide insight into whether Americans have become more or less willing to discuss specific issues on-and offline as a result of government surveillance programs.  While this study focused on the Snowden-NSA revelations, we suspect that Americans use social media in similar ways to discuss and get news about other political issues.

About this Report

An informed citizenry depends on people’s exposure to information on important political issues and on their willingness to discuss these issues with those around them. The rise of social media, such as Facebook and Twitter, has introduced new spaces where political discussion and debate can take place. This report explores the degree to which social media affects a long-established human attribute—that those who think they hold minority opinions often self-censor, failing to speak out for fear of ostracism or ridicule. It is called the “spiral of silence.”

This report is a collaborative effort based on the input and analysis of the following individuals:5

Keith N. Hampton, Associate Professor, Rutgers University
Lee Rainie, Director, Internet Project
Weixu Lu, PhD student, Rutgers University
Maria Dwyer, PhD student, Rutgers University
Inyoung Shin, PhD student, Rutgers University
Kristen Purcell, Associate Director for Research, Internet Project

Other major reports from the Pew Research Center Internet Project on the social and political impact of social networking sites on social and political activity can be found at:

http://www.pewinternet.org/2012/10/19/social-media-and-political-engagement/
http://www.pewinternet.org/2012/09/04/politics-on-social-networking-sites/
http://www.pewinternet.org/2013/04/25/civic-engagement-in-the-digital-age/
http://www.pewinternet.org/2012/02/03/why-most-facebook-users-get-more-than-they-give/
http://www.pewinternet.org/2011/06/16/social-networking-sites-and-our-lives/
http://www.pewinternet.org/2004/10/27/the-internet-and-democratic-debate/

About this survey

This report contains findings from a nationally representative survey of 1,801 American adults (ages 18+) conducted by the Pew Research Center and fielded August 7-September 16, 2013 by Princeton Research Associates International. It was conducted in English and Spanish on landline (N=901) and cell phones (N=900). The margin of error for the full sample is plus or minus 2.6 percentage points. Some 1,076 respondents are users of social networking sites and the margin of error for that subgroup is plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

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9 Comments
Maggie
Maggie
September 5, 2014 9:13 am

Informed debate is sorely lacking in our society. I maintain a FB page, with several people blocked from access (particularly those who refuse to respect my right to my own opinion on my own page) because they continued to suggest I was being unpatriotic by supporting Snowden’s actions and posting his subsequent interviews, asking my family and friends to join me in discussing the situation. The silence was almost deadening, with one cousin actually commenting “Why do you like to waste your time on this stuff?”

I continue to post controversial articles and continue to reduce the amount of comments on my page to almost negligible numbers. I like that… I have a intellectual friend in Ireland who is more informed on the issues I like to discuss than most of the people I know here. She discusses and debates points with me on my page and I get private messages from family members asking who that strange woman with the odd name is. (Anne uses her Gaelic name as a Facebook name and often chats to me in the olde language, which amuses me greatly.)

Anyway, I wish people were not so very dumbed down. I wish people understood just how important it is to be fully aware of what is happening not only in Ferguson, Missouri and along the Texas border with Mexico, but in the Ukraine as well. I actually had an old school chum reply to my comments about the irrational intervention in the former Soviet state with “Well, if Putin would just mind his own business and stop trying to steal the Ukraine’s oil, we wouldn’t have to go in there and stop him. But until he stops stealing their oil and gas, we need to try to stop him.” To which I replied with a map showing the pipelines coming into the Unkraine country FROM Russia and have never heard from him again. I didn’t get ugly; I just replied that the oil comes from Russia and showed him the map, but there was no reply.

Now, when I jumped onto the Gentle Giant bandwagon early in the Ferguson debacle, I had the integrity later to retract at least part of my diatribe about how evil the police were for murdering a young man who was striving to escape the culture of poverty. Once I learned I’d swallowed the propaganda, I was more than willing to admit he was not the martyr I’d believed, but was a thug like most of the gansters in the ghettos of our large cities. My Irish friend Anne and I carried on a quite civil discussion on my FB page, comparing the Protestant/Catholic issues of Ireland with the ongoing racial tensions here. However, of my 350 some-odd FB friends and family members, NOT ONE of them joined that discussion publicly. A couple sent me private messages or emails, but not one of them joined what was, I believe, a very interesting and enlightening discussion about the riots in Ireland versus the riots in Ferguson.

I don’t know if they are afraid to speak out or if they are just too stupid to form an opinion with which to enter the discussion. Either of those doesn’t hold out much hope, does it?

Personally, I prefer they avoid my page and that by doing so, they alert me as to who I can trust for an honest answer when the real crisis comes to our streets. By that time, I plan to be settled into our very solidly Mennonite built log home in the Missouri Ozarks, listening to crickets, songbirds, the chatter of chickens and goats, and the occasional report from a HAM radio.

Our driveway is repaired; the floors are replaced with hardwood; the photos of rooms will be taken this weekend; we list our current home next week. While we plan to have internet access via dish network in the hills, we plan to be too busy living a new and better way to do more than the daily check-in to our favorite blogs (TBP will be one of my choices). I probably will not close my FB page, but except for a private group post that includes my Irish friend Anne, my social networking days will probably be behind me.

Stucky
Stucky
September 5, 2014 9:38 am

“Informed debate is sorely lacking in our society. ” ———— Maggie

Watch Fux Newz. They have “fair and balanced debates” (their words) all day, every day.

You can’t take two pounds of shit and make a peach pie. Likewise, expecting reasonable discussion via FB and other social media will lead you to great disappointment (as you have found out). FB is for letting the world know important stuff …. like whether or not your morning shit was lumpy or not.

Maggie
Maggie
September 5, 2014 10:18 am

As gross as that was, I laughed.

I really wasn’t disappointed at most of my 350 plus “friends” (words really have taken on odd meanings in this time in which we live), since most of them were added at a time I managed a community page that had a very large audience who seemed to enjoy my photographs and commentary. After a cyberstalker taught me a lesson about allowing “public” access to my page commentaries, and after discovering that several of the albums I’d posted honoring various members of our community who had died were shared to that strangers’ page without comment, I stopped adding content or photos to the page. I left it as it is to allow the less sinister members of the community to enjoy and share the photographs of their ancestors and their local community that I’d found amongst my boxed inherited family albums from days gone by. In order for them to access the page, they have to be my “friends”, unless I want to create a Private Group and take the time to add the ones I trust to that group. I do not.

However, I did expect there to be more than one person willing to discuss national and international events among my real friends and family. But, I was wrong. I ended up being unfriended by more than one for having an opinion that didn’t agree with theirs. And, you are right… I really am not all that interested in the photos of their lunches or pictures of themselves in their new shoes anyway. What a bunch of moronic narcissists. Makes me proud to be a Murkin.

Maddie's Mom
Maddie's Mom
September 5, 2014 10:55 am

@Ghost,

I’m not sure I even know 350 people. lol

The only people who will discuss anything of importance is my 30-yo daughter and my husband. And that’s if they’re in the mood.

The Silly Season is here to stay, permanently, I’m afraid.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
September 5, 2014 11:15 am

Yesterday I landfilled a box I recently unearthed in the basement.

Its contents were pamphlets and other literature I accumulated during my “libertarian evangelist” phase back in the mid-1990’s.

You now what?

No one gave a rat’s ass about (what I considered) “important” topics.
No one gave a rat’s ass what I thought about them.

In the social media mania (today), never have so many people believed everyone else can’t live without the wisdom they wish to share on their faceplant pages. How many will reach, in a decade or two, the level of embarrassment I feel now from my naivete regarding such things?

Its a vice that I even bother typing a comment like this. (In this case, it’s a vice in that I’m wasting my time, deluding myself that anyone gives a rat’s ass what I type.)

All I needed to know about this stuff I learned from Albert J Nock’s “Isaiah’s Job,” widely available to read on the ‘net or even listen to on youtube.

May the force be with you, and not stamping on your face.

Maggie
Maggie
September 5, 2014 12:19 pm

@ Maddie’s Mom… I don’t know 350 people personally, just through other friends and family of friends that wanted to be part of my community page. And the Silly Season is a long one indeed.

@dc sunsets…am reading Isaiah’s Job now at Lew Rockwell.com, so I suppose I give a rat’s ass at the minimum.

Maggie
Maggie
September 5, 2014 12:41 pm

@ dc sunsets. And excellent read and wonderful point about the masses, the Remnant and the thankless work of true prophets. I myself am not a prophet, nor am I trying to educate the masses. I am simply trying to engage a few people in conversation about things that impact our existence. It is futile on Social Media or even in day to day encounters. The most intelligent conversation I had yesterday was with the mason who repaired my driveway. He may be the smartest guy I’ve met in years.

Maggie
Maggie
September 5, 2014 1:14 pm
Westcoaster
Westcoaster
September 5, 2014 2:57 pm

From what I know about F-book, people don’t want to lose their “friends”, so they clam up about their viewpoints in order not to offend. People I come in contact with are generally way misinformed about current affairs, mostly stemming from exposure to Fox news as their sole source of information. Most seem to be in the “blame Obama” mode, not realizing the hidden forces behind the scenes that control everything. And I for one, opening applaud Snowden and Manning for their attempts to open the eyes of the world to the awful things the U.S. government does to its own citizens and the countries we choose to invade.