The Japan Times - Facebook's algorithm doesn't alter people's beliefs: research

EUR -
AED 4.309185
AFN 77.664833
ALL 96.578153
AMD 447.171387
ANG 2.100795
AOA 1075.974916
ARS 1700.476811
AUD 1.767714
AWG 2.11499
AZN 1.993018
BAM 1.957417
BBD 2.36071
BDT 143.349055
BGN 1.95623
BHD 0.4424
BIF 3465.69311
BMD 1.173365
BND 1.515258
BOB 8.099727
BRL 6.513937
BSD 1.172048
BTN 105.019984
BWP 16.486341
BYN 3.444788
BYR 22997.944348
BZD 2.357308
CAD 1.616486
CDF 3002.053142
CHF 0.931885
CLF 0.027239
CLP 1068.571028
CNY 8.261601
CNH 8.251715
COP 4494.45541
CRC 585.383681
CUC 1.173365
CUP 31.094159
CVE 110.356654
CZK 24.322262
DJF 208.718899
DKK 7.469058
DOP 73.420665
DZD 152.282774
EGP 55.701142
ERN 17.600468
ETB 182.087276
FJD 2.683896
FKP 0.880157
GBP 0.874526
GEL 3.150516
GGP 0.880157
GHS 13.462181
GIP 0.880157
GMD 85.655547
GNF 10245.552838
GTQ 8.981459
GYD 245.223664
HKD 9.127767
HNL 30.878119
HRK 7.532879
HTG 153.677633
HUF 386.567869
IDR 19695.509941
ILS 3.76599
IMP 0.880157
INR 105.136335
IQD 1535.468701
IRR 49398.645621
ISK 147.210343
JEP 0.880157
JMD 187.544961
JOD 0.831933
JPY 184.814279
KES 151.376059
KGS 102.610622
KHR 4703.906708
KMF 492.81343
KPW 1056.02802
KRW 1736.943149
KWD 0.360833
KYD 0.976807
KZT 606.561179
LAK 25385.542435
LBP 104960.335779
LKR 362.89366
LRD 207.457879
LSL 19.662411
LTL 3.464641
LVL 0.709756
LYD 6.353141
MAD 10.743823
MDL 19.843057
MGA 5330.313385
MKD 61.60011
MMK 2464.431858
MNT 4166.879392
MOP 9.394362
MRU 46.907758
MUR 54.17501
MVR 18.128533
MWK 2032.444691
MXN 21.122085
MYR 4.783227
MZN 74.995458
NAD 19.662747
NGN 1711.915715
NIO 43.136009
NOK 11.894511
NPR 168.034124
NZD 2.029398
OMR 0.45116
PAB 1.172073
PEN 3.947178
PGK 4.986162
PHP 68.993251
PKR 328.389238
PLN 4.205643
PYG 7863.363174
QAR 4.273149
RON 5.086416
RSD 117.383056
RUB 93.018839
RWF 1706.580996
SAR 4.401058
SBD 9.559106
SCR 16.336993
SDG 705.789525
SEK 10.866224
SGD 1.514473
SHP 0.880327
SLE 28.219844
SLL 24604.87134
SOS 668.652483
SRD 45.105889
STD 24286.276292
STN 24.520365
SVC 10.255474
SYP 12975.512305
SZL 19.659909
THB 36.586091
TJS 10.800924
TMT 4.106776
TND 3.430849
TOP 2.825181
TRY 50.228508
TTD 7.955573
TWD 36.975015
TZS 2914.028456
UAH 49.558404
UGX 4192.481957
USD 1.173365
UYU 46.018219
UZS 14090.462297
VES 331.076119
VND 30899.967624
VUV 141.511723
WST 3.271124
XAF 656.488242
XAG 0.017038
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.171076
XCG 2.112445
XDR 0.816461
XOF 656.488242
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.730202
ZAR 19.609678
ZMK 10561.685231
ZMW 26.518459
ZWL 377.822893
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • RIO

    0.6900

    78.32

    +0.88%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    91.36

    +0.82%

  • BP

    0.6300

    33.94

    +1.86%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.2800

    76.11

    -0.37%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.17

    -0.52%

  • BCE

    -0.0100

    22.84

    -0.04%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    48.61

    +0.66%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    56.45

    -1.05%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    15.68

    +1.79%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.38

    -0.37%

  • BCC

    -2.9300

    74.77

    -3.92%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.84

    +0.31%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    40.73

    +0.2%

Facebook's algorithm doesn't alter people's beliefs: research
Facebook's algorithm doesn't alter people's beliefs: research / Photo: JOSH EDELSON - AFP/File

Facebook's algorithm doesn't alter people's beliefs: research

Do social media echo chambers deepen political polarization, or simply reflect existing social divisions?

Text size:

A landmark research project that investigated Facebook around the 2020 US presidential election published its first results Thursday, finding that, contrary to assumption, the platform's often criticized content-ranking algorithm doesn't shape users' beliefs.

The work is the product of a collaboration between Meta -- the parent company of Facebook and Instagram -- and a group of academics from US universities who were given broad access to internal company data, and signed up tens of thousands of users for experiments.

The academic team wrote four papers examining the role of the social media giant in American democracy, which were published in the scientific journals Science and Nature.

Overall, the algorithm was found to be "extremely influential in people's on-platform experiences," said project leaders Talia Stroud of the University of Texas at Austin and Joshua Tucker, of New York University.

In other words, it heavily impacted what the users saw, and how much they used the platforms.

"But we also know that changing the algorithm for even a few months isn't likely to change people's political attitudes," they said, as measured by users' answers on surveys after they took part in three-month-long experiments that altered how they received content.

The authors acknowledged this conclusion might be because the changes weren't in place for long enough to make an impact, given that the United States has been growing more polarized for decades.

Nevertheless, "these findings challenge popular narratives blaming social media echo chambers for the problems of contemporary American democracy," wrote the authors of one of the papers, published in Nature.

- 'No silver bullet' -

Facebook's algorithm, which uses machine-learning to decide which posts rise to the top of users' feeds based on their interests, has been accused of giving rise to "filter bubbles" and enabling the spread of misinformation.

Researchers recruited around 40,000 volunteers via invitations placed on their Facebook and Instagram feeds, and designed an experiment where one group was exposed to the normal algorithm, while the other saw posts listed from newest to oldest.

Facebook originally used a reverse chronological system and some observers have suggested that switching back to it will reduce social media's harmful effects.

The team found that users in the chronological feed group spent around half the amount of time on Facebook and Instagram compared to the algorithm group.

On Facebook, those in the chronological group saw more content from moderate friends, as well as more sources with ideologically mixed audiences.

But the chronological feed also increased the amount of political and untrustworthy content seen by users.

Despite the differences, the changes did not cause detectable changes in measured political attitudes.

"The findings suggest that chronological feed is no silver bullet for issues such as political polarization," said coauthor Jennifer Pan of Stanford.

- Meta welcomes findings -

In a second paper in Science, the same team researched the impact of reshared content, which constitutes more than a quarter of content that Facebook users see.

Suppressing reshares has been suggested as a means to control harmful viral content.

The team ran a controlled experiment in which a group of Facebook users saw no changes to their feeds, while another group had reshared content removed.

Removing reshares reduced the proportion of political content seen, resulting in reduced political knowledge -- but again did not impact downstream political attitudes or behaviors.

A third paper, in Nature, probed the impact of content from "like-minded" users, pages, and groups in their feeds, which the researchers found constituted a majority of what the entire population of active adult Facebook users see in the US.

But in an experiment involving over 23,000 Facebook users, suppressing like-minded content once more had no impact on ideological extremity or belief in false claims.

A fourth paper, in Science, did however confirm extreme "ideological segregation" on Facebook, with politically conservative users more siloed in their news sources than liberals.

What's more, 97 percent of political news URLs on Facebook rated as false by Meta's third-party fact checking program -- which AFP is part of -- were seen by more conservatives than liberals.

Meta welcomed the overall findings.

They "add to a growing body of research showing there is little evidence that social media causes harmful... polarization or has any meaningful impact on key political attitudes, beliefs or behaviors," said Nick Clegg, the company's president of global affairs.

S.Suzuki--JT