A small, unrepresentative group controls online political discussions while most people stay silent, according to a new study published in Science Advances. Researchers created six private Reddit communities with 520 Americans discussing 20 political topics over four weeks. While 331 participants posted at least once, a handful generated most of the 5,819 total comments, with some writing over 100 posts. The study found people who stayed quiet perceived discussions as more toxic and unconstructive than active commenters. Conversely, users who saw environments as polarized or toxic posted even more frequently. Financial incentives of up to $40 barely increased participation, and civility reminders had no measurable effect. The findings suggest online political discourse creates a “funhouse mirror” of public opinion dominated by conflict-comfortable voices. (Story URL)
Study Finds A Small Minority Dominates Online Political Debates

Trump mocks Rob Reiner, suggests without evidence his liberal politics led to his death
4h ago
Massachusetts man convicted of murdering wife before searching how to 'dispose of a body'
4h ago
Israeli forces kill Palestinian teen in West Bank, health ministry says
4h ago
EU imposes sanctions on oil traders with links to Russia's shipping network
4h ago
Ukraine hits Russian submarine in first underwater drone attack
3h ago
US, Mexico sign new agreement on Tijuana River sewage crisis, EPA says
2h ago






