How the News Media Activate Public Expression and Influence National Agendas
Abstract
We demonstrate that exposure to the news media causes Americans to take public stands on specific issues, join national policy conversations, and express themselves publicly—all key components of democratic politics—more often than they would otherwise. After recruiting 48 mostly small media outlets, we chose groups of these outlets to write and publish articles on subjects we approved, on dates we randomly assigned. We estimated the causal effect on proximal measures, such as website pageviews and Twitter discussion of the articles’ specific subjects, and distal ones, such as national Twitter conversation in broad policy areas. Our intervention increased discussion in each broad policy area by approximately 62.7% (relative to a day’s volume), accounting for 13,166 additional posts over the treatment week, with similar effects across population subgroups.
On the Science website: Abstract, Reprint, Full text, and a comment (by Matthew Gentzkow) “Small media, big impact”.
Replication data at the Harvard Dataverse: https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/1EMHTK.
See Also
- [Paper] How the News Media Activate Public Expression and Influence National Agendas (2017)
- [Dataset] Replication data (Harvard Dataverse)
- [Presentation] How the News Media Activate Public Expression and Influence National Agendas (University of Minho) (2019)
- [Paper] Experimental Evidence on the (Limited) Influence of Reputable Media Outlets (2025)
- [Presentation] Public Policy for the Poor? A Randomized Evaluation of the Mexican Universal Health Insurance Program (Harvard School of Public Health) (2022)
- [Presentation] Sequential Experiments and News Media Effects (2018)
- [Presentation] Fabricating News In Chinese Social Media (2017)
- [Paper] Evaluating COVID-19 Public Health Messaging in Italy: Self-Reported Compliance and Growing Mental Health Concerns (2020)