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Paper #1769

Título:
Politician-citizen interactions and dynamic representation: Evidence from Twitter
Autores:
Aina Gallego, Nikolas Schöll y Gaël Le Mens
Fecha:
Enero 2021
Resumen:
We study how politicians learn about public opinion through their regular interactions with citizens and how they respond to perceived changes. We model this process within a reinforcement learning framework: politicians talk about different policy issues, listen to feedback, and increase attention to better received issues. Because politicians are exposed to different feedback depending on their social identities, being responsive leads to divergence in issue attention over time. We apply these ideas to study the rise of gender issues. We collected 1.5 million tweets written by Spanish MPs, classified them using a deep learning algorithm, and measured feedback using retweets and likes. We find that politicians are responsive to feedback and that female politicians receive relatively more positive feedback for writing on gender issues. An analysis of mechanisms sheds light on why this happens. In the conclusion, we discuss how reinforcement learning can create unequal responsiveness, misperceptions, and polarization.
Palabras clave:
political responsiveness, representation, social media, gender
Área de investigación:
Economía Política
Publicado en:
American Journal of Political Science, 2023, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ajps.12772
Con el título:
How Politicians Learn from Citizens’ Feedback: The Case of Gender on Twitter

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