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Citation

Political Online Information Searching in Germany and the United States: Confirmation Bias, Source Credibility, and Attitude Impacts

Author:
Knobloch-Westerwick, Silvia; Mothes, Cornelia; Johnson, Benjamin K.; Westerwick, Axel; Donsbach, Wolfgang
Publication:
Journal of Communication
Year:
2015

Before the 2013 German federal election, 121 participants completed a 2-session online study (which paralleled a U.S. study before the 2012 presidential election). They browsed online search results pertaining to 4 political issues while selective exposure was unobtrusively measured. In a 4 × 2 × 2 (topic × issue stance × source credibility) within-subjects design, the search results indicated either issue support or opposition, associated with low- or high-credibility sources. Hypotheses were derived from cognitive dissonance, approach-avoidance, and motivated cognition models. Findings yielded a confirmation bias. Attitude-consistent exposure uniformly reinforced attitudes; attitude-discrepant exposure uniformly weakened attitudes. Analyses with parallel U.S. data showed a stronger confirmation bias in the United States than in Germany.