Does this study "refute" the echo chamber hypothesis, or simply fail to support it?
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Well, it seems to be the biggest study to date, and it (again!) yields no hints of echo chambers. Decide yourself!
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If it's no bother, I'd love to be pointed in the direction of some echo chamber refutation.
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For a starter, the basic concept behind echo chambers, selective exposure, doesn't pass the empirical test.https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227747056_Politically_Motivated_Reinforcement_Seeking_Reframing_the_Selective_Exposure_Debate …
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Are you saying Cass Sunstein takes a condescending position unsupported by data? I never heard of such a thing!
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Among others, he constantly falls for the "priming" bullshit, for example in "Nudge".pic.twitter.com/V7Z1Pt8ZNM
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Good. Too bad the narrative seems set in stone. Intentionally choosing to look at all sides is not a dead art.
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It's more than that. The echo chamber argument explains why persuasion fails, in a way that puts the blame on the algorithm or Facebook.
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Thanks for sharing, Rolf.
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May I ask your thoughts on how this relates to in-person echo chambers (it looks like this is mostly related to online/internet)?
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I.E. —- Do you think that we get varied opinions in our personal life in the same way that this is suggesting we get online?
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