Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users

A growing social science literature has used Twitter and Facebook to study political and social phenomena including for election forecasting and tracking political conversations. This research note uses a nationally representative probability sample of the British population to examine how Twitter a...

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Main Authors: Jonathan Mellon, Christopher Prosser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-07-01
Series:Research & Politics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168017720008
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spelling doaj-8dbd61f324ba4469b19e61666850458a2020-11-25T03:28:14ZengSAGE PublishingResearch & Politics2053-16802017-07-01410.1177/2053168017720008Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media usersJonathan Mellon0Christopher Prosser1British Election Study, Nuffield College, University of Oxford, UKBritish Election Study, University of Manchester, UKA growing social science literature has used Twitter and Facebook to study political and social phenomena including for election forecasting and tracking political conversations. This research note uses a nationally representative probability sample of the British population to examine how Twitter and Facebook users differ from the general population in terms of demographics, political attitudes and political behaviour. We find that Twitter and Facebook users differ substantially from the general population on many politically relevant dimensions including vote choice, turnout, age, gender, and education. On average social media users are younger and better educated than non-users, and they are more liberal and pay more attention to politics. Despite paying more attention to politics, social media users are less likely to vote than non-users, but they are more likely to support the left leaning Labour Party when they do vote. However, we show that these apparent differences mostly arise due to the demographic composition of social media users. After controlling for age, gender, and education, no statistically significant differences arise between social media users and non-users on political attention, values or political behaviour.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168017720008
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonathan Mellon
Christopher Prosser
spellingShingle Jonathan Mellon
Christopher Prosser
Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users
Research & Politics
author_facet Jonathan Mellon
Christopher Prosser
author_sort Jonathan Mellon
title Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users
title_short Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users
title_full Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users
title_fullStr Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users
title_full_unstemmed Twitter and Facebook are not representative of the general population: Political attitudes and demographics of British social media users
title_sort twitter and facebook are not representative of the general population: political attitudes and demographics of british social media users
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Research & Politics
issn 2053-1680
publishDate 2017-07-01
description A growing social science literature has used Twitter and Facebook to study political and social phenomena including for election forecasting and tracking political conversations. This research note uses a nationally representative probability sample of the British population to examine how Twitter and Facebook users differ from the general population in terms of demographics, political attitudes and political behaviour. We find that Twitter and Facebook users differ substantially from the general population on many politically relevant dimensions including vote choice, turnout, age, gender, and education. On average social media users are younger and better educated than non-users, and they are more liberal and pay more attention to politics. Despite paying more attention to politics, social media users are less likely to vote than non-users, but they are more likely to support the left leaning Labour Party when they do vote. However, we show that these apparent differences mostly arise due to the demographic composition of social media users. After controlling for age, gender, and education, no statistically significant differences arise between social media users and non-users on political attention, values or political behaviour.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168017720008
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