Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Jul 20;17(7):e0270355. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0270355. eCollection 2022.
The rise of ideological polarization in the U.S. over the past few decades has come with an increase in hostility on both sides of the political aisle. Although communication and compromise are hallmarks of a functioning society, research has shown that people overestimate the negative affect they will experience when viewing oppositional media, and it is likely that negative forecasts lead many to avoid cross-ideological communication (CIC) altogether. Additionally, a growing ideological geographic divide and online extremism fueled by social media audiences make engaging in CIC more difficult than ever. Here, we demonstrate that online video-chat platforms (i.e., Zoom) can be used to promote effective CIC among ideologically polarized individuals, as well as to better study CIC in a controlled setting. Participants (n = 122) had a face-to-face CIC over Zoom, either privately or publicly with a silent ingroup audience present. Participant forecasts about the interaction were largely inaccurate, with the actual conversation experience found to be more positive than anticipated. Additionally, the presence of an ingroup audience was associated with increased conflict. In both conditions, participants showed preliminary signs of attitude moderation, felt more favorable toward the outgroup, and felt more informed about the issue after the CIC. These results suggest that face-to-face CIC's are generally positive and beneficial for polarized individuals, and that greater effects may be achieved through private conversations, as opposed to more public social media-like interactions. Future researchers studying ideological conflict may find success using similar Zoom paradigms to bring together ideologically diverse individuals in controlled lab settings.
过去几十年,美国意识形态两极分化加剧,两党之间的敌意也随之上升。尽管沟通和妥协是一个运转良好的社会的标志,但研究表明,人们高估了他们在观看对立媒体时会经历的负面影响,而且负面预测可能导致许多人完全避免跨意识形态交流(CIC)。此外,意识形态地理鸿沟的扩大和社交媒体受众助长的极端主义,使得进行 CIC 比以往任何时候都更加困难。在这里,我们证明,在线视频聊天平台(例如,Zoom)可用于促进意识形态两极分化的个人之间进行有效的 CIC,也可用于在受控环境中更好地研究 CIC。参与者(n=122)通过 Zoom 进行了面对面的 CIC,要么是私下进行,要么是在有一个沉默的内群体观众在场的情况下公开进行。参与者对互动的预测大多不准确,实际的对话体验比预期的更为积极。此外,内群体观众的存在与冲突的增加有关。在这两种情况下,参与者都表现出了初步的态度调整迹象,对外部群体的看法更加有利,并且在 CIC 后对问题的了解更加深入。这些结果表明,面对面的 CIC 通常是积极和有益的,对于两极分化的个人来说,通过私下对话而不是更公开的社交媒体式互动,可能会取得更大的效果。未来研究意识形态冲突的研究人员可能会通过类似的 Zoom 范式成功地将意识形态多样化的个人聚集在受控的实验室环境中。