Research on Political Ads on Social Media in the 2020 US Elections receives Knight Foundation Funding
Research that sheds light on the messaging in the 2020 U.S. presidential campaign ads on social media has received funding support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
The Foundation has awarded $148,000 to support The Illuminating 2020 Project, spearheaded by Syracuse University’s School of Information Studies Professor Jennifer Stromer-Galley and Assistant Professor Jeff Hemsley, along with University of Liverpool Derby Fellow Patricia Rossini.
The project aims to provide more comprehensive information and greater transparency about the content and reach of political ads on Facebook and Instagram as a way to help journalists who cover the 2020 presidential campaign. Researchers are using state-of-the-art algorithms and other computational tools to categorize and classify the statements candidates and others make in those ads, then making that information into a useable database and sharing it online to assist journalists.
“This project will empower journalists to leverage technology and better inform the public on important issues, especially with an election cycle in high gear,” says Paul Cheung, Knight Foundation director for journalism and technology innovation. “Journalists want to understand how candidates are using Facebook and Instagram, and given their enormous influences on the electorate and the public debate, it’s also important to learn how bad actors are using political ads on these social platforms.”
Classifying Statements
While other studies have tracked social media postings of candidates and the structured data surrounding them (such as changes in the number of followers), Stromer-Galley, Hemsley, and Rossini have taken a different tack.
Their team of faculty, doctoral, masters and undergraduate students are examining what the candidates are actually saying on social media. Using a variety of machine learning techniques, “we were able to accurately characterize the topic, tone, and style of political campaign messages on social media,” Rossini notes. Researchers also classify the toxicity levels of what is being said, then compile and share the data. “By looking at the type and tone of social media ads, in comparison to the messages that are publicly posted by candidates on social media, our research will provide an overview of how the use of microtargeted ads affect campaign discourse,” she explains.
As Stromer-Galley details, “With online ads increasingly being microtargeted to segments of the public, journalists need tools to be able to see and report on what candidates and other political organizations are saying to whom during the 2020 presidential campaign behind the closed doors of Facebook and Instagram.” Hemsley adds, “By using the tools and techniques we have developed over several years here at the iSchool, we hope to empower journalists to do that.”
Helping Journalism
Political reporters face the challenge of not only needing to cover candidate speeches, campaign events, and TV ads, but also what is happening on social media. The sheer volume of information flowing through social platforms makes it difficult to accurately and comprehensively report on that arena.
“Journalists will be able to use the site to find out where a given candidate is currently running negative ads, for example. They could also see or be alerted to when there are major changes in campaign strategy by a candidate, or they can see if political action committees are running especially uncivil, or what we are calling ‘toxic’, ads in battleground states,” Stromer-Galley explains.
Five Years of Social Media Campaign Data
The 2020 research is the newest part of a larger project that Stromer-Galley, Hemsley, and Rossini have been conducting since 2014 to study and classify Twitter and Facebook posts by political candidates on their free social media accounts. Past research covered the 2014 campaigns of governors across the United States, the 2016 presidential campaigns, and 2018 U.S. House and Senate and country-wide gubernatorial campaigns.
In addition to Knight Foundation funding, Illuminating 2020 is also supported by the Center for Computational and Data Science in the iSchool at Syracuse University. Journalists who are interested in gaining access to the interactive database or obtain more information are welcome to contact the team at ccds.ischool.syr.edu.