4.8 Article

The small effects of political advertising are small regardless of context, message, sender, or receiver: Evidence from 59 real-time randomized experiments

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 6, Issue 36, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abc4046

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Funding

  1. Andrew F. Carnegie Foundation
  2. J. G. Geer of Vanderbilt University
  3. UCLA Marvin Hoffenberg Fellowship
  4. Andrew F. Carnegie Corporation as part of an Andrew F. Carnegie Fellowship in the Humanities and Social Sciences
  5. UCLA's Marvin Hoffenberg Chair in American Politics and Public Policy

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Evidence across social science indicates that average effects of persuasive messages are small. One commonly offered explanation for these small effects is heterogeneity: Persuasion may only work well in specific circumstances. To evaluate heterogeneity, we repeated an experiment weekly in real time using 2016 U.S. presidential election campaign advertisements. We tested 49 political advertisements in 59 unique experiments on 34,000 people. We investigate heterogeneous effects by sender (candidates or groups), receiver (subject partisanship), content (attack or promotional), and context (battleground versus non-battleground, primary versus general election, and early versus late). We find small average effects on candidate favorability and vote. These small effects, however, do not mask substantial heterogeneity even where theory from political science suggests that we should find it. During the primary and general election, in battleground states, for Democrats, Republicans, and Independents, effects are similarly small. Heterogeneity with large offsetting effects is not the source of small average effects.

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