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Wiley InterScience


Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication

Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication

Volume 12 Issue 1, Pages 209 - 229

Published Online: 20 Dec 2006

© 2010 International Communication Association



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Perceptions of News Credibility about the War in Iraq: Why War Opponents Perceived the Internet as the Most Credible Medium
Junho H. Choi a James H. Watt b Michael Lynch c
  a School of Communication Arts
Kwangwoon University, Seoul

  b Department of Language, Literature, and Communication
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

  c Department of Language, Literature, and Communication
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Copyright 2006 International Communication Association

Abstract

AbstractNews about the war and the dominant mediumPerceptions of online news credibilityLiterature reviewHostile media effect: Issue-involved audiences and media bias assessmentReferences

This study investigated cross-media credibility perception with respect to news coverage about the Iraq War. In an environment of political partisanship, perceptions of media credibility were likely affected by the audience's political position on the war. Based on hostile media effect theory, a set of hypotheses was proposed to investigate whether the minority opinion group, war opponents, evaluated the Internet as a more credible medium than did neutrals or supporters. An online survey was conducted to which 481 people responded (71% war supporters, 19% opponents, 10% neutrals). Results showed that opponents of the war perceived the Internet as less aligned with a pro-government position and as more credible than did neutrals or supporters. The opponent group also showed a strong negative correlation between perceived pro-government alignment and perceptions of Internet credibility. For the minority partisan group, the diversity of information and views on the war was the main reason for the perception of high credibility of the Internet as a news channel.


Received: 30 November 2006; Accepted: 14 December 2006;
DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1083-6101.2006.00322.x About DOI

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