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Appealing to the Base or to the Moveable Middle? Incumbents’ Partisan Messaging Before the 2016 U.S. Congressional Elections
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Libby Hemphill, University of Michigan
Version: View help for Version V1
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
---|---|---|---|
scores | 04/08/2018 08:16:PM | ||
tags | 04/08/2018 08:20:PM | ||
2016-election-polar-scores.csv | text/csv | 267.7 KB | 04/08/2018 04:04:PM |
2016_election.R | text/x-r-syntax | 6.8 KB | 04/08/2018 04:04:PM |
Project Citation:
Hemphill, Libby. Appealing to the Base or to the Moveable Middle? Incumbents’ Partisan Messaging Before the 2016 U.S. Congressional Elections. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2018-04-08. https://doi.org/10.3886/E102501V1
Project Description
Summary:
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Contains weekly measures of partisanship for verified official US Congress Twitter accounts for Sep - Nov 2016. In the main CSV, variables included are Twitter handle, party affiliation, margin of victory, week, and absolute value of #polar score. Tags files include the Twitter handle, all hashtags it posted during the period, and the number of times it posted each tag. Scores files include #polar scores for both tags and users for each week and for the whole period. The original #polar-score paper:
Hemphill, L., Culotta, A., & Heston, M. (2016). #Polar Scores: Measuring partisanship using social media content. Journal of Information Technology & Politics. 13(4). doi: 10.1080/19331681.2016.1214093
And the working paper for this project:
Hemphill, L. and Shapiro, M.A., (2018). Partisan Messaging Before the 2016 Congressional Election. Midwest Political Science Association Conference, Chicago, IL, April 5 – 8.
Files here corrected errors identified in the MPSA paper, and so results will not exactly match those presented in the paper.
Hemphill, L., Culotta, A., & Heston, M. (2016). #Polar Scores: Measuring partisanship using social media content. Journal of Information Technology & Politics. 13(4). doi: 10.1080/19331681.2016.1214093
And the working paper for this project:
Hemphill, L. and Shapiro, M.A., (2018). Partisan Messaging Before the 2016 Congressional Election. Midwest Political Science Association Conference, Chicago, IL, April 5 – 8.
Files here corrected errors identified in the MPSA paper, and so results will not exactly match those presented in the paper.
Funding Sources:
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National Science Foundation (1822228)
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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social media;
United States Congress;
political communication;
social media
Time Period(s):
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9/2016 – 11/2016 (Fall 2016)
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Published Versions
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