TY - JOUR
T1 - Racial Minorities Face Discrimination From Across the Political Spectrum When Seeking to Form Ties on Social Media
T2 - Evidence From a Field Experiment
AU - Nair, Krishnan
AU - Mosleh, Mohsen
AU - Kouchaki, Maryam
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - We conducted a preregistered field experiment examining racial discrimination in tie formation on social media. We randomly assigned research accounts varying on race (Black, White) and politics (liberal/Democrat, conservative/Republican, neutral) to follow a politically balanced sample of Twitter (i.e., X) users (N = 5,951) who were unaware they were in a research study. We examined three predictions from the social and political psychology literatures: i) individuals favor White over Black targets, ii) this tendency is stronger for conservatives/Republicans than for liberals/Democrats, and iii) greater discrimination by conservatives/Republicans is explained by the assumption that racial minorities are liberal/Democrat. We found evidence that individuals were less likely to reciprocate social ties with Black accounts than White accounts. However, this tendency was not moderated by individuals’ political orientation, shared partisanship, or partisan mismatch. In sum, this work provides field experimental evidence for racial discrimination in tie formation on social media by individuals across political backgrounds.
AB - We conducted a preregistered field experiment examining racial discrimination in tie formation on social media. We randomly assigned research accounts varying on race (Black, White) and politics (liberal/Democrat, conservative/Republican, neutral) to follow a politically balanced sample of Twitter (i.e., X) users (N = 5,951) who were unaware they were in a research study. We examined three predictions from the social and political psychology literatures: i) individuals favor White over Black targets, ii) this tendency is stronger for conservatives/Republicans than for liberals/Democrats, and iii) greater discrimination by conservatives/Republicans is explained by the assumption that racial minorities are liberal/Democrat. We found evidence that individuals were less likely to reciprocate social ties with Black accounts than White accounts. However, this tendency was not moderated by individuals’ political orientation, shared partisanship, or partisan mismatch. In sum, this work provides field experimental evidence for racial discrimination in tie formation on social media by individuals across political backgrounds.
KW - field experiment
KW - open data
KW - open materials
KW - partisanship
KW - political ideology
KW - preregistered
KW - racial discrimination
KW - social media
KW - tie formation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85206392887
U2 - 10.1177/09567976241274738
DO - 10.1177/09567976241274738
M3 - Article
C2 - 39374517
AN - SCOPUS:85206392887
SN - 0956-7976
VL - 35
SP - 1278
EP - 1286
JO - Psychological Science
JF - Psychological Science
IS - 11
ER -