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Cross-Platform Emotions and Audience Engagement in Social Media Political Campaigning : Comparing Candidates’ Facebook and Instagram Images in the 2020 US Election

Bossetta, Michael LU and Schmøkel, Rasmus (2023) In Political Communication 40(1). p.48-68
Abstract
This study provides a cross-platform, longitudinal investigation of pictures depicting political candidates posted to Facebook and Instagram over a 15-month period during the 2020 US election(n = 4,977). After motivating an exploratory research design, we set out to expound: the extent of cross-platform image posting across Facebook and Instagram; the emotion expression of politicians across the two platforms; and the relationship between these emotions and post performance. Our analysis of eight political campaigns (seven Democratic challengers and the Republican incumbent) finds relatively high and stable levels of cross-posting candidate pictures across the two platforms. The exception is the incumbent campaign, where cross-posting... (More)
This study provides a cross-platform, longitudinal investigation of pictures depicting political candidates posted to Facebook and Instagram over a 15-month period during the 2020 US election(n = 4,977). After motivating an exploratory research design, we set out to expound: the extent of cross-platform image posting across Facebook and Instagram; the emotion expression of politicians across the two platforms; and the relationship between these emotions and post performance. Our analysis of eight political campaigns (seven Democratic challengers and the Republican incumbent) finds relatively high and stable levels of cross-posting candidate pictures across the two platforms. The exception is the incumbent campaign, where cross-posting activity rose in proximity to the primary elections. Regarding emotions, we utilize both computer vision and crowd coding to identify happiness as the dominant emotion on Facebook and Instagram. Overall, we detect little variation in candidate emotion expressions – across campaigns and across platforms. However, we do find differences in how platform audiences respond to emotions, proxied here through post performance. Results from binomial logistic regressions show that in comparison with Calm, posts exhibiting Anger are less likely to overperform on both Facebook and Instagram. Most interestingly, we find diverging patterns for Happiness, which performs better than Calm on Instagram but not on Facebook. We interpret these findings to suggest first, that Instagram users reward emotionality from politicians. Second and more importantly, we argue that differing audience responses to emotions – captured through social media metrics – may reveal a generation polarization in what different segments of the electorateprefer their political leaders to be. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
open science, facebook, instagram, visual political communicaton, exploratory research, cross-platform, social media
in
Political Communication
volume
40
issue
1
pages
48 - 68
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85141072884
ISSN
1091-7675
DOI
10.1080/10584609.2022.2128949
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bb6f06b5-0387-4961-a9c0-f472d92331df
date added to LUP
2022-09-30 17:51:28
date last changed
2023-03-30 13:43:54
@article{bb6f06b5-0387-4961-a9c0-f472d92331df,
  abstract     = {{This study provides a cross-platform, longitudinal investigation of pictures depicting political candidates posted to Facebook and Instagram over a 15-month period during the 2020 US election(n = 4,977). After motivating an exploratory research design, we set out to expound: the extent of cross-platform image posting across Facebook and Instagram; the emotion expression of politicians across the two platforms; and the relationship between these emotions and post performance. Our analysis of eight political campaigns (seven Democratic challengers and the Republican incumbent) finds relatively high and stable levels of cross-posting candidate pictures across the two platforms. The exception is the incumbent campaign, where cross-posting activity rose in proximity to the primary elections. Regarding emotions, we utilize both computer vision and crowd coding to identify happiness as the dominant emotion on Facebook and Instagram. Overall, we detect little variation in candidate emotion expressions – across campaigns and across platforms. However, we do find differences in how platform audiences respond to emotions, proxied here through post performance. Results from binomial logistic regressions show that in comparison with Calm, posts exhibiting Anger are less likely to overperform on both Facebook and Instagram. Most interestingly, we find diverging patterns for Happiness, which performs better than Calm on Instagram but not on Facebook. We interpret these findings to suggest first, that Instagram users reward emotionality from politicians. Second and more importantly, we argue that differing audience responses to emotions – captured through social media metrics – may reveal a generation polarization in what different segments of the electorateprefer their political leaders to be.}},
  author       = {{Bossetta, Michael and Schmøkel, Rasmus}},
  issn         = {{1091-7675}},
  keywords     = {{open science; facebook; instagram; visual political communicaton; exploratory research; cross-platform; social media}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{48--68}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Political Communication}},
  title        = {{Cross-Platform Emotions and Audience Engagement in Social Media Political Campaigning : Comparing Candidates’ Facebook and Instagram Images in the 2020 US Election}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/124816536/Bossetta_Schm_kel_2022_Cross_Platform_Emotions_and_Audience_Engagement_in_Social_Media_Political_Campaigning_Comparing_Candidates_Facebook_and_Instagram_Images_in_the_2020.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/10584609.2022.2128949}},
  volume       = {{40}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}