Peter M. Dahlgren

Peter M. Dahlgren
University of Gothenburg | GU

Doctor of Philosophy
https://peterdahlgren.com/

About

7
Publications
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193
Citations
Introduction
Skills and Expertise

Publications

Publications (7)
Book
Full-text available
En översikt om metoder och strategier för att mäta snabba opinionsförändringar och undersöka opinioner/ händelser i sociala medier
Article
Full-text available
The new high-choice media environment has raised concerns that users of social networking sites primarily select political information that supports their political opinions and avoid information that challenges them. This behaviour is reinforced by personalisation algorithms that create filter bubbles and both narrow the available content and excl...
Article
Full-text available
When people use social networking sites, they may be exposed to political content they have chosen (selective exposure) and content they have not chosen (forced exposure). Counter-attitudinal content that people have not chosen can provoke them to resist persuasion by counterarguing and disliking their political opponents. I test these assumptions...
Thesis
Full text: https://peterdahlgren.com/thesis/ The new digital media landscape has created a high-choice media environment that has made it easier for people to find news and information that support their political beliefs and attitudes, and avoid news and information that challenge those beliefs or attitudes. How does this affect people’s selectio...
Article
Full-text available
The transition from a low-choice to a high-choice media environment has led to concerns about audience fragmentation, ideological enclaves, and selective exposure to partisan news media consistent with people’s political preferences. However, previous research has mainly focused on two-party systems (e.g., the United States) and partisan news (e.g....
Article
The growth of partisan news sources has raised concerns that people will increasingly select attitude-consistent information, which might lead to increasing political polarization. Thus far, there is limited research on the long-term mutual influences between selective exposure and political attitudes. To remedy this, this study investigates the re...
Conference Paper
The growth of partisan news sources has raised concerns that people will increasingly select attitude-consistent information, which lead to increasing political polarization. Thus far, there is limited research on the long-term mutual influences between selective exposure and political attitudes. This study therefore investigates the reciprocal inf...

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