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(Jan 2006) Thank you. Elliott Parker ====================================================================
The Impact of Source Types on Perceived Bias of Online News Sources Li Zeng College of Communications Arkansas State University Mailing Address: 5372 Knollwood Dr, #8, Parma, OH 44129 Telephone: (870) 972-3625 E-mail: [log in to unmask] and Walter B. Jaehnig School of Journalism Southern Illinois University Carbondale
(Paper submitted to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division for consideration for presentation at the AEJMC annual convention, August 2005, San Antonio, TX) Abstract This study examines whether different types of sources quoted within online news stories affect individuals' perception of source bias. One hundred and five college students participated in an experimental setting. The findings provide evidence for the applicability of the Elaboration Likelihood Model in an online news environment. When exposed to stories arousing a high level of motivation, participants reported that official sources were more biased than individuals affiliated with non-government organizations.
The Impact of Source Types on Perceived Bias of Online News Sources Introduction Two in three American adults who are online now seek news on the Internet (Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2005). As a response to this increasing online news demand, Internet news Web sites have sprung up like mushrooms. Internet Service Providers (ISP) such as America Online (AOL) offer news on their Web sites, along with many other online-only news organizations. Newspapers, television, radio, and other traditional news media also joined the digital mix, partly for fear of losing audiences if they fail to have an online presence. The explosion of online news brings about tremendous diversity in both the content and form of news. However, it has become apparent that online news is sometimes highly biased or occasionally even simply cyber-gossip. Some media scholars and professionals address the problem by advocating quality journalism on the Internet. The Online News Association, for example, specifies in its mission that "[o]nline journalists should uphold traditional high principles" of journalistic practice (Online News Association, 2001). Traditional news media have few reservations about implementing strict editorial rules on their Web sites, as they use in their traditional delivery. However, many online-only news Web sites do not have vigorous editorial policies. The multimedia features of the Internet have invited people skillful in multi-media interaction but lacking journalism training to become news disseminators. The ease with which everyone can be transformed into a potential online journalist also spurred amateur journalists to practice on the Internet. A case in point is Matt Drudge's gossip site (http://www.drudgereport.com), where he shows to the online audience what can happen to news absent the limitation of traditional journalistic rules. There is not yet broad agreement as to whether traditional journalistic principles and practices should be applied to the delivery of online news. In traditional news reporting, for example, journalists have long been told that an integral component of good journalistic practice is quoting from credible sources (Gans, 1979; Izard, Culbertson, & Lambert, 1977; Jones, 1976). Editors frequently require that reporters contact legitimate sources and incorporate quotations in their stories so as to increase credibility and vividness of stories. Sourcing is so essential to news reporting that a news story, however newsworthy and truthful it is, would rarely be published without being properly attributed to a credible source (Sundar, 1998). However, for almost every news story there are numerous potential sources. These sources contribute their own interpretations and may influence audiences' assessment of the events being covered. This study examines whether certain types of sources quoted within online news reports affect individuals' evaluation of source bias. Based upon previous content analyses of traditional news reports, the study intends to answer whether the type of sources quoted within an online news report affects perceived source bias. Review of the Literature Source Type in Media Coverage For decades researchers have been interested in the selection of news sources in media coverage, particularly in the framework of the framing theory. According to Goffman (1974), a news frame is a "schemata of interpretation" (p. 21). It allows the audience to understand an event or an issue presented in the media by including (versus excluding) and emphasizing (versus deemphasizing) certain aspects. The framing of news sources is mostly concerned with the selection of or granting more space to certain sources in preference to others. Sources are important to news for several reasons. As Shoemaker and Reese (1991) noted, news sources "have a tremendous effect on mass media content, because journalists can't include in their news reports what they don't know" (p. 150). More importantly, some types of sources are so powerful that they "may also influence the news in subtle ways by providing the context within which all other information is evaluated…and by monopolizing the journalists' time so that they don't have an opportunity to seek out sources with alternative views" (p. 150). Nonetheless, source type has been a vague variable in the literature. Few previous studies, if any, have provided a clear and unambiguous measure of the variable. The most relevant measure is perhaps the scale used for affiliation, which has been frequently adopted over the years in analysis of traditional news content. Initially employed in the 1979 ABC News-Harris Survey (Harris, 1979), the variable of affiliation contained eight categories: U.S. government, state government, local government, foreign government, affiliated U.S. citizen, unaffiliated U.S. citizen, foreign citizen, and other. Using this measure, Brown and associates (1987) found that source patterns in newspaper stories featured diversity, but it was limited diversity in the sense that sources were mostly in the range of "government." Berkowitz (1987) reported the same pattern in television newscasts. However, these eight categories were created not by using a single standard of classification, thus violating a fundamental rule of measurement. In the scale, the standard of affiliation was contaminated by such other standards as the level of government and locations. For instance, the first three categories were created by the level of government organizations in the United States, but the fourth category, foreign government, was far from being another level of government in the United States. Similarly, the distinction between affiliated U.S. citizens and unaffiliated U.S. citizens was their connection or non-connection to non-governmental organizations. But foreign citizens differed from the previous two categories by their citizenship. In this study the ABC News-Harris scale were modified so that its weaknesses were overcome. A closer look at the ABC News-Harris scale helps determine the source types in this study. As Brown et al. (1987) pointed out, the first four categories of sources were all government officials. In studies of news content and credibility (Armstrong & Nelson, 2003; Paletz, Fozzard, & Ayanian, 1982; Soloski, 1989; Zoch & Turk, 1998), government officials have been included in a broader source type called officials, which also included legal personnel in the United States or abroad. Therefore, the first type of source in this study were officials, most of whom were government officials. The remaining four categories used in the ABC News-Harris study also can be reclassified. Foreign citizens can be affiliated or unaffiliated to different non-governmental organizations, just as their U.S. counterparts are. The news media tend not to consider as legitimate news sources average citizens absent authority status unless such individuals have direct experience (e.g., as a victim, beneficiary, or witness), possess unique knowledge as a result of their affiliation (e.g., a professor at University of California Berkeley talking about environment protection), or represent a special group (e.g., a spokesperson of the union). They can be divided into two types. One type, called involved parties, includes individuals who become news sources due to their first-hand experience in a news issue being covered. The other type, called affiliated individuals, refers to individuals who become news sources due to their connections with non-governmental organizations. Rarely are individuals lacking the credentials of these three types sought as news sources. Therefore, this study examined three types of sources: officials, involved parties, and affiliated individuals. Numerous studies have been designed to examine the pattern of source types that contribute to the images painted by journalists and to public understanding of social events. With few exceptions, findings showed a heavy dominance by officials in news stories, regardless of the type and level of news media through which they are delivered. Officials. One of the earliest comprehensive studies of source diversity was Sigal's (1973) longitudinal content analysis of major U.S. newspapers, wherein he discovered a limited diversity in source types, with most sources falling under an official label. Brown and associates (1987) replicated Sigal's study in a content analysis of front-page stories published in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and four local/state newspapers in North Carolina. They found that among the 5,248 sources identified in the stories, the most dominant were government sources, of which approximately one-third (31%) were affiliated with the U.S. federal government, and another quarter (24.4%) affiliated with other levels of U.S. government or foreign governments. These data supported what Brown et al. (1987) proposed as the distinction between diversity and range: diversity from an elite pluralistic perspective is a constrained concept and can best be "a great deal of variety within a relatively narrow range of sources through the presentation of trivial differences among them" (p. 45). The tendency to rely heavily upon official sources is more pronounced when political violence, especially that against the United States or its citizens, is concerned. Paletz, Fozzard, and Ayanian (1982) reported that in the New York Times and television network news coverage of three terrorist groups, the news media depended upon official sources and denied legitimacy of terrorists and justness of terrorist causes. In a content analysis of magazine news stories and network newscasts on two U.S. terrorist incidents, Gallimore (1991) found that authority sources (most of whom were officials) accounted for more than 40 percent of the total number of sources. In the more recent case of the "9/11" attack, numerous studies have revealed the media's excessive dependency on officials (e.g., Zeng, 2002; Zeng, 2003; Zeng & Xiao, 2003). Involved parties. Despite the many journalist-preferred features possessed by official sources, different types of non-official sources are allowed occasional appearance under various situations. In news coverage of a major accident, for example, primary sources such as victims, witnesses, and even perpetrators are provided with space, although usually limited compared with the room granted to official sources. Atwater (1987) analyzed the 1985 TWA hijacking and hostage taking and found that 53 percent of the sources were victims and their families. In a study of political violence coverage in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times, Picard and Adams (1991) found that 2.2 percent of the total characterization words about attacks of political violence and their perpetrators were from the mouths of witnesses to the events. Although comprising only 2.2 percent, this figure is not negligible because Picard and Adams included in the total a category called media source, which is generally not considered a type of news source but accounted for over 90 percent of the total in their 1991 study. A content analysis (Gallimore, 1991) of magazine news stories and network newscasts on two U.S. terrorist incidents identified 6 percent of the sources in the coverage as perpetrators. In another study of the coverage of the "9/11" attack in the three U.S. elite newspapers, Zeng (2003) noted that witnesses contributed to 1.6 percent of the total characterizations of the "9/11" attack and people who perpetrated it.[1] Empirical data also revealed that quotations from primary sources, despite their non-official status and their consequential lack of suitability as news sources for journalists, are influential on the audience's perception of news. Personal exemplifications from individuals involved in an issue under coverage, such as victims and witnesses, for example, are well documented to affect individuals' understanding of the issue. Gibson and Zillman (1993) found that exemplification from victims and witnesses considerably affected people's understanding of issues reported in news stories. They asked college students to read a print news report about the problem of inadequate safety in amusement parks. Some students read a version featuring personal testimony from individuals who had been involved in or witnessed amusement park accidents, some read a version with the testimony paraphrased by the journalist, and others read a version containing merely factual information about the injuries suffered by several victims, with a summary of the arguments from both sides of the safety issue. The results showed that those who read the version with personal testimony believed that safety in amusement parks was less adequate than those who were not exposed to personal testimony by primary sources. Affiliated individuals. Janowitz (1991) proposed that one of the three-fold roles of the mass media was to prevent one side of an issue from monopolizing or excessively overshadowing other sides. This is mostly achieved through granting news space to affiliated individuals, whom journalists also consider legitimate and credible (Thurwanger, 2003). Among this type of sources are individuals affiliated with non-governmental institutions, such as business organizations and special interest groups. In a content analysis of community newspaper coverage of prison site selection, affiliated individuals were cited in nearly 20 percent of the coverage, with business sources representing 11.8 percent and organizations with opposing opinions about the issue accounting for 7.1 percent (Thurwanger, 2003). However, the way affiliated individuals are covered in the news media renders them more vulnerable to accusation of bias than officials. Although viewed as legitimate by journalists, affiliated individuals possess a social position that is never equivalent in power and prominence to that occupied by officials. As revealed in previous studies, affiliated individuals are merely supplementary to the already established official power structure as reflected in media frames. Their chances of being quoted are even smaller when they represent viewpoints conflicting with those of the U.S. government, for instance, when an individual is affiliated with an "unfriendly" organization. When indeed cited, these sources face a greater threat of being viewed as biased. News Sources and Perception of News Stories Media researchers have examined at least three types of sources, story bylines, news media, and sources quoted in news stories. This study is interested in sources for quotation in a news story, which are what journalists usually refer to as news sources. Essentially, this line of research overlaps with the research on quotations, where primary attention was paid to whether sources are directly quoted, paraphrased, or not mentioned at all in a news story. The findings about the effects of quotations on audiences' perceptions are ambiguous, some even conflicting with each other. Largely overlooked is the influence that source selection, especially the type of sources selected, might have upon individuals' perceptions of news credibility and understanding of the issue concerned. Over the years of credibility research, only a few scholars have noted that journalists' reliance on limited types of sources might prevent them from obtaining a complete view of the event they cover (Ericson, Baranek, & Chan, 1987), which in turn affects their audience's assessment of news credibility. For example, Rouner, Slater and Buddenbaum (1999) proposed that the pattern of sources typically used may constrain and bias news coverage, although empirical data suggested that journalists and the general public have different understanding of bias. Armstrong and Nelson (2003) used official and non-official source cues to test people's perception of credibility. College students were asked to read identical stories about a missing hiker quoted from a gender-neutral name but with either an official or non-official title. It was found that the subjects considered the official source (a park ranger) more credible than the non-official source (a fellow hiker), despite the same name and identical information they conveyed. The authors further argued that the source might be used by individuals as a heuristic cue, such that the credibility of the source will be transferred to the information content. When people are exposed to a news report that quotes an authority source, they believe the source is less biased and more credible, and tend to process the information based on such heuristics. As a consequence, they will assign more credibility to the message as a whole, even though the report contains the same information as the one quoting a non-official source. More importantly, the non-official source was manipulated as "a friend who had been camping with the missing hiker" (p. 13). As a witness he/she knew more about the condition under which the incident occurred and was able to provide more background information than the official park ranger. Despite his/her knowledge as an eyewitness, unfortunately, his/her lack of authority status disqualified him/her from being considered as an unbiased source. Elaboration Likelihood Model A way to avoid being misled by over-generalization of the impact of low-credible and high-credible sources is to consider the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM). The model was developed by Petty and Cacioppo (1986), who noted that research on cognitive responses to persuasion in the previous decade failed to consider an important audience variable. According to them, elaboration was "the extent to which a person thinks about the issue-relevant arguments contained in a message" (p. 128). There are various levels of elaboration and it is best viewed as falling along a continuum (Perloff, 1993). The amount of elaboration individuals engage in depends on how active they are as information processors. According to Petty and Cacioppo (1986), active information processors process the message they receive through the central route, which involves heavy cognitive elaboration; passive receivers take the peripheral route for information processing and hardly engage in any elaboration work. Under the Elaboration Likelihood Model, which pathway an individual chooses for message processing is determined by his/her motivation and ability to process. Motivation is more extensively studied in the literature, of which involvement has been identified as the key element. People are high in involvement when they perceive an issue as highly relevant to their personal lives. They are low in involvement when an issue bears little personal relevance to them. Under high involvement situations individuals are motivated to select the central route and engage in issue-relevant thinking. As a result they pay more attention to fundamental features such as the quality of an argument. Under low involvement conditions, however, individuals are more likely to take the peripheral route, which usually requires nothing but superficial thinking about the issue. One of the possibilities is that under low involvement message recipients make simple decisions by such peripheral cues as source expertise (Petty, Cacioppo, & Goldman, 1981) or even the number of arguments in a message (Eagly & Chaiken, 1984; Perloff, 1993). As a consequence, they may agree with the message simply because it includes an expert source or numerous, albeit weak, arguments. When exposed to news, it is possible that low-involvement individuals focus on the authoritativeness of sources, rather than attending to the bias with which such sources present their account of a certain issue. Hypotheses Some unique features of the Internet require that online news readers be active news seekers. For example, unlike traditional news reports, online news stories are usually presented in a non-linear format with the use of hyperlinks. Very often online news readers seek news they are interested in by selecting certain hyperlinks and click on them. As predicted by the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM), individuals with high motivation tend to choose the central route for information processing. As a consequence, they are less likely to make simple decisions based on such source cues as authority and expertise. Rather, they would pay more attention to the quality of the arguments, including inherent bias on the part of the sources providing these arguments. Therefore, officials, despite their authority status, may be perceived as no less biased than the other two types of sources. H1a: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials more biased than involved parties; H1b: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials equally biased as involved parties; H2a: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials more biased than affiliated individuals; H2b: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials equally biased as affiliated individuals. When surfing a news Web site, however, some online news readers may accidentally click on a link and come across news stories that they are usually not interested in, or they might try any link on a Web page and read a story to pass time. As a consequence, they are not highly motivated to read those news stories and may simply judge the stories by such peripheral cues as the authoritativeness of news sources. However, the biases of different source types are not equally apparent to the general audience. Because officials occupy the center of the power structure in a society and have been the dominant sources in news coverage, their biases are rarely noticeable under the cover of authority and credibility the society assumes them to possess. However, there is no conclusive evidence as to whether involved parties or affiliated public members are considered biased. In some studies it was found that traditional news audience tended to ignore the bias of such involved parties as victims and witnesses (Aust & Zillman, 1996; Gibson & Zillman, 1998; Zillman, Gibson, Sundar, & Perkins, 1996), but were concerned about the bias of a spokesperson of a non-governmental organization (Fedler & Counts, 1981). However, one study (Armstrong & Nelson, 2003) reported that a witness (a fellow hiker in a story about a missing hiker) was considered more biased than a non-governmental official (a park ranger). H3: Individuals with low motivation will perceive officials less biased than: a) involved parties, and b) affiliated individuals. Methods Overall Design This study employed a 2_7 experimental design that combined a within-subject and a between-subject design. A within-subject design was used for the manipulation of the independent variable "motivation." Each participant was asked to read four news stories on different topics, two stories high in "motivation," and two low in "motivation" (meaning that the stories aroused high/low levels of motivation among the respondents). A between-subject design was chosen for the manipulation of the other independent variable "story type." As a consequence, there were seven treatment groups in this study. One hundred and five college students at a Southwestern university participated in this study in September 2004. Although a random sample was not used in this study, efforts were made to randomly assign treatments to the participants. This randomization helped control for extraneous variances that might exist in certain groups of participants. The dependent variable, source bias, is a perceived attribute of a news source whereby the individual news source, or the group the news source represents, has an apparent vested interest in a cause or action relative to maintaining or changing the status quo (Rouner, Slater, & Buddenbaum, 1999). In a broader sense, it refers to whether a news source presents only one side of a story. Researchers (Andsager, 2003; Rouner et al., 1999) frequently used a single-item scale "bias" to measure source bias. To increase the validity of the measure, three additional items were used to measure the variable, which are one-sided, neutral, and fair. Six-point Likert-type statements were presented about the three sources quoted in each story. Respondents were asked to indicate their level of agreement on those statements (strongly agree, agree, slightly agree, slightly disagree, disagree, and strongly disagree). A Web site was designed specifically for this study. To rule out story-specific effect (Jackson, 1992), two stories were used in each treatment conditions. In the high motivation condition were a story about prisoner abuse in Iraq and one about a proposed tuition increase in the program where the respondents were enrolled in. The low motivation condition included a story about protection of eagle habitats in Ohio and one about budget changes for summer schools in New York City. Seven versions were created for each of the four stories. The basic information in all seven versions was identical, with variation in only the type of sources quoted within each story. The first three versions each cited only one type of source, with version one citing an official, version two citing an involved party, and version three citing an affiliated public member. Versions four to six each cited two types of sources, with version four citing both an official and an involved party, version five citing both an official and an affiliated public member, and version six citing an involved party and an affiliated public member. The last version, version seven, cited all three types of sources. In all versions except the last one, quotations from the sources who were not included in each version were converted into statements by the reporter. Slight changes in language were made in the first six versions when needed for grammatical and logical purposes. To help the respondent identify the sources and refer back when necessary, all source names appeared in boldface on the Web site. A different version of a paper and pencil questionnaire was prepared for each treatment group. All seven versions of the questionnaire were identical in content. The major difference between the versions was that they directed participants to different links on the Web site, and the links took the participants to Web pages with matching versions of the four treatment stories. For example, version one of the questionnaire directed the participant to the link "A1," and this hyperlink took him/her to a page with version one of story A, which cited only an official source. After reading the first story and completing the questions about the official source and the story itself in the questionnaire, the participant read directions that told him/her to click on "B1" on the current Web page, and that took him/her to version one of story B, which also cited only an official source. After reading the second story, he/she answered the questions about the source and story B1. Similarly, the respondent completed stories C1 and D1. Subjects assigned to other treatment groups read similar instructions and went to the links that matched the treatments they were assigned to.
Procedures for Data Collection The experiment was carried out in computer labs with Internet access at a mid-sized Southwestern university. To rule out the possibility that students in one session were systematically different from those in another session, individual subjects were randomly assigned to the seven conditions. Two graduate students administered the study in a computer laboratory setting. All seven versions of the questionnaire were collated and handed out in such a way that a randomly selected first participant in the first session received version one, the second version two, until the eighth receiving version one again. This systematic way of distributing the questionnaire was employed during the whole process of this study to ensure that each respondent was randomly assigned to a treatment condition. After completing the questions on demographics and general media use, the respondents were instructed to visit the Web site of this study. The first page of the Web site displayed the text "Welcome to participate in this study" in a large font at the center of the screen. A "Start" button was located below the welcoming message. The respondents were told to click the "Start" button and open another Web page, which listed seven buttons. Following the directions at the bottom of page 2 of the questionnaire, the respondent clicked on the button corresponding to the version he/she was assigned to (button A1 for version one; A2 for version two…A7 for version seven) and read the first story. At the end of the first story on the computer screen, there was an instruction "End of Story A1(A2…A7). Now please turn to p. 3 of the questionnaire and answer the questions about the story you just read." After completing the questions about the first story, respondents read another instruction on the questionnaire saying, "Now please click on the button B1 (B2, …B7) at the bottom of your computer screen and read story B1 (B2, …B7)." Similar to the first story, at the end of the second story respondents read an instruction, "Now please turn to p.4 of the questionnaire and answer the questions about the story you just read." Similar instructions were provided for stories C and D. At the end of the questionnaire, respondents read, "That's all. Thank you!" After everybody in a session completed, the questionnaires were collected. The respondents were thanked and dismissed. Findings This study analyzed data from 105 students enrolled in classes at a mid-sized public university. Most of the respondents were Communications majors (84.8%). The youngest respondent was 18 years old, and the oldest 43, with an average age of 20.7 years old. There were slightly more females (51.4%) than males. Repeated-measure ANOVA tests established that the effect of source type on perception of source bias was uniform across stories. Therefore, a composite measure of the dependent variable, source bias, was created by averaging scores across the two stories under the same treatment condition. When reading stories arousing high motivation, the student respondents rated affiliated individuals the least biased (mean = 3.51) among all three types of sources. For a six-point scale with a mean of 3.50, the bias rating of affiliated individuals at 3.51 suggested that affiliated individuals were not actually considered biased. Involved parties, such as the mistreated prisoner in Baghdad and the local high school student who might be affected by a proposed tuition increase, were considered to be the most biased (mean = 4.14). Officials were seen as slightly less biased (mean = 4.05) than involved parties, but somewhat more biased than individuals affiliated with non-governmental organizations. Different source types were rated significantly different in terms of bias, as indicated by the significant ANOVA result of the effect of source type on the composite measure of source bias after controlling demographic variables (F(2, 179) = 7.707, p. < .05). Involved parties were also considered the most biased source (mean = 4.74) for the students reading stories that stimulated low motivation. Officials (mean = 3.92) and affiliated individuals (mean = 3.91) received identical bias ratings, both considerably lower than involved parties. The source type had a significant effect on perceived source bias under the low motivation condition (F. = 20.255, p. < .05) after controlling the variance of demographic variables, as the ANOVA analysis suggested. The bias ratings also showed that both involved parties and affiliated individuals were rated as far more biased when respondents were not motivated than when they were highly motivated. As the level of motivation increased, however, respondents tended to believe that officials were less biased. H1a: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials more biased than involved parties; H2b: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials equally biased as involved parties. When the student participants were exposed to stories that evoked high motivation, they considered officials slightly less biased than involved parties. However, as shown in Table 1, the difference was not statistically significant (t (1, 118) = -.554, p. > .05). Therefore, H1a, which proposed that respondents with a high level of motivation would consider officials more biased than involved parties, was rejected and H1b, which predicted that respondents with highly motivation would consider officials equally biased as involved parties, was supported. H2a: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials more biased than affiliated individuals; H2b: Individuals with high motivation will perceive officials equally biased as affiliated individuals. For students reading the stories on prisoner abuse and tuition increase (both arousing high motivation), officials were considerably more biased (mean = 4.05) than individuals affiliated with non-government organizations (mean = 3.51). T-test results in Table 1 suggested that the difference in bias scores was significant (t (1, 118) = 3.398, p. < .05), leading to the retention of H2a, which stated that respondents with high motivation would rate officials as more biased than affiliated individuals, and the rejection of H2b, which proposed that the two source types would be equally biased. Table 1 Perceived Source Bias as a Function of Source Type Source type t (1, 118) p. Official Involved Affiliated High motivation 4.05 4.14 -.554 .580 4.05 3.51 *3.398 .001 Low motivation 3.92 4.74 *-5.689 .000 3.92 3.91 .089 .930 (Note: * indicated a significant effect at alpha = .05) H3a: Individuals with low motivation will perceive officials less biased than involved parties; H3b: Individuals with low motivation will perceive officials less biased than affiliated individuals. When reading the stories on eagle protection and summer schools, which aroused a low level of motivation, the students believed that officials (mean = 3.92) were considerably less biased than involved parties (mean = 4.74). As displayed in Table 1, officials were rated as significantly less biased than involved parties (t (1, 118) = -5.689, p. < .05), providing support for H3a, which predicted that respondents with low motivation would perceive officials as less biased than involved parties. However, for respondents under the same low motivation condition, officials and affiliated individuals were nearly even in bias (t (1, 118) = .089, p. > .05), leading to the rejection of H3b, a proposition that officials would be seen as less biased than affiliated individuals. Discussion and Conclusions This study examined how different types of online news sources were perceived in terms of bias. College students from a mid-sized Southwestern public university participated in the study in an experimental setting. Participants in each of the seven treatment groups were asked to read a version of four news stories posted on a Web site designed specifically for this study. Two of the stories were about topics that were considered highly relevant to the student participants and hence would arouse a high level of motivation from the participants, and the other two stories were about topics that were seen to bear little relevance to the students, thus arousing a low level of motivation. Each version of the stories quoted one of the three types of sources (officials, involved parties, and affiliated individuals) or a combination of the three source types. The findings provide evidence that the Elaboration Likelihood Model, a theoretical model in understanding how people process information delivered through traditional mass communication and interpersonal communication, bears strong explanatory power in how individuals process news delivered on the Internet. The results from this study also support the proposition that source type plays an important role in people's perception of source bias and online news credibility. Among the three types of sources quoted in different versions of stories manipulated in this study, some sources were considered biased, while others were not, despite the presumption that any source could present only one perspective of a certain issue or event. In addition to the strong support this study lends to the ELM in online news, an interesting finding of this study was that for the college student subjects in this study as a group, affiliated individuals were considered as not biased or low in bias, but involved parties were always seen as biased. This is consistent with an earlier study (Armstrong & Nelson, 2003), which found that a witness was believed to be more biased than an individual affiliated with a non-governmental organization (a park ranger). That affiliated individuals were considered to be low in bias can be explained by saying that affiliated individuals are usually perceived as disinterested and less likely to exercise authority over the public, at least those individuals who hold distrust of politicians might think so. This explanation is relevant to the ELM, but also differs from the ELM in that it carries across different levels of motivation. It is not yet clear, however, why involved parties were considered high in bias, despite their apparent involvement in the issue and hence first-hand experience about what has happened. A possible explanation might be that involved parties are usually perceived to be highly emotional and lacking sufficient detachment to provide neutral and rational elaboration of an occurrence. For the respondents with low motivation, officials were no longer considered biased, although the same type of source was believed to be highly biased among individuals reading highly motivating stories. This is not surprising, however, considering the authority officials possess and the ELM prediction that individuals under the low motivation condition base their judgment on the authority of a source. What deserves attention is that although both officials and affiliated individuals received low bias ratings among respondents reading stories arousing low motivation, only the low bias of officials was carried over to participants' perception of story credibility. In other words, while the perceived low bias of officials helped foster the credibility of stories quoting officials, the similarly low bias of affiliated individuals did not seem to have affected the credibility of the stories quoting affiliated individuals. This disparity in how perceived bias of officials and that of affiliated individuals affected the perceived credibility of the stories quoting these sources may be related to how valid the perception of the low bias of each source type is among the student participants when they read stories arousing little motivation. A possibility is that for individuals exposed to low motivation stimulus, officials and affiliated individuals were both considered to possess low levels of bias but according to differing standards. This study is among the first to use the Elaboration Likelihood Model to explain people's perception of online news messages. The strong support for the ELM found in this study indicates that the ELM should not be limited to traditional media research. Although online news is an extensive category and may still lack a clear definition among the public, online versions of traditional news media are an important part of online news. This study provides evidence that, in addition to its strong explanatory power established in traditional media research, the ELM is also helpful in our understanding of online news perception. Suggestions for Future Research This study is an exploratory examination of the impact of source type on people's perception of source bias and news credibility in the online environment. Much research is desirable to test the explanatory power of source bias as the predictor variable and to address the limitations mentioned in the previous section. Future research should study other samples from the online news population. First, it is important to know whether the findings from this study are representative of the perceptions of college students in other parts of the country, e.g., students in a metropolitan institution, students at a private research university, or those at a small community college. Second, because it is currently impossible to study a random sample of all online news users in the United States, further studies should be conducted to examine other segments of this population, especially those with highly different demographics than the somewhat homogenous student sample employed in this study. For example, because college students represent a narrow range of age, it is important to study individuals of other age groups, such as the middle-aged or the elderly. It can also be revealing if similar studies can be carried out with individuals with less education, or with people who are more dependent upon traditional news media than most college students are.
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[1] Although only 1.6 percent of the total, witnesses played a role that was more than trivial because Zeng (2003) employed the same scales that Picard and Adams (1991) used. The media, which is not strictly a news source, contributed to more than 70% of the characterization terms in Zeng's study, therefore leading to a smaller percentage for witnesses than they actually accounted for.
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