|
Looking Beyond Job Approval: How Media Coverage of the Monica Lewinsky Scandal Influenced Public Opinion of the Presidency
By
Spiro Kiousis Doctoral Student Department of Journalism University of Texas Austin, TX 78712 [log in to unmask] (512) 719-5572
Submitted to the AEJMC annual conference in New Orleans, LA August 4-7, 1999
* The author would like to thank Dr. Maxwell McCombs & Dr. Bruce Buchanan for their insightful comments on earlier drafts of this paper.
Looking Beyond Job Approval: How Media Coverage of the Monica Lewinsky Scandal Influenced Public Opinion of the Presidency
Abstract
Last year's Executive scandal involving Monica Lewinsky perplexed many media experts because a story of such magnitude would normally be expected to heavily sway public opinion of the presidency, yet most media accounts described minimal fluctuations. Anchored in agenda setting, priming, and the elaboration likelihood model of attitude change, the purpose of this paper was to, over time, trace and compare media coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal to public opinion of the presidency. Findings suggest that media coverage of the scandal preceded changes in public opinion about the presidency (job approval and perceived favorability). The data also show that newspapers and television news wield similar influence on perceived favorability, but newspapers are more related to swings in job approval, albeit weakly. Additionally, the data provide some evidence for second-level agenda setting, priming, and attitude change. Finally, media influence on perceived favorability is shown to be robust when controlling for external factors (time & economic indicators) but is not robust with respect to job approval.
Submitted to the AEJMC annual conference in New Orleans, LA August 4-7, 1999
* The author would like to thank Dr. Maxwell McCombs & Dr. Bruce Buchanan for their insightful comments on earlier drafts of this paper.
Looking Beyond Job Approval: How Media Coverage of the Monica Lewinsky Scandal Influenced Public Opinion of the Presidency
Looking Beyond Job Approval: How Media Coverage of the Monica Lewinsky Scandal Influenced Public Opinion of the Presidency
Background
Introduction Last year's Executive scandal involving Monica Lewinsky perplexed many media experts because a story of such magnitude would normally be expected to heavily sway public opinion of the presidency, yet most media accounts described minimal fluctuations (e.g., Mitchell & Elder, 1998). Surely, mass communication and political science scholars must be equally bewildered, given the influence mass media is acknowledged to exert on perceptions of politicians (e.g., Roberts, 1997). While much conjecture and speculation has surrounded the possible impact of this story on public opinion, a systematic, empirical analysis has yet to be conducted to assess its influence. Accordingly, the purpose of this paper is to fill this lacuna in research by, over time, tracing and comparing media coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal to public opinion of the presidency. Unlike many press pundits and White-House spin doctors who have only searched for immediate negative effects on presidential job approval, we suspect some media influence to exist but can probably only be detected by appropriating a longitudinal research design such as the one employed for this project. Presidential Assessment and Public Opinion Public evaluations of the presidency typically have been operationally defined as the level of presidential job approval (e.g., Mueller, 1970). According to some research in this area, the principal factors that alter presidential popularity are new administrations, international events, the economy, and war (Simonton, 1987). Indeed, Dick Morris's famous explanation for Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential election victory ("It's the Economy Stupid") is especially telling in the context of presidential job approval. Notwithstanding the impact of these forces, other factors are also central in shaping presidential job approval, including time (e.g., Stimson, 1976)-especially the early-term honeymoon--, audience demographics (Zukin & Carter, 1982), and party identification (Edwards, 1983). Of particular importance to public appraisals of the president is the impact of mass media (Graber, 1982). For example, Brody & Page's (1975) news discrepancy theory submits that Executive job approval is inextricably linked to the amount of positive media coverage a president receives. Elsewhere, Brody (1991), in a rigorous analysis of news and the presidency, reported that media coverage of the White House significantly predicts job approval, even when controlling for the early-term honeymoon, policy proposals, economic factors, international events, and time. Finally, Edwards (1983) conveys that "studies of press coverage of presidential elections have concluded that the public's information on and criteria for evaluating candidates parallels what is presented in the media" (p.165). Shanto Iyengar and his colleagues have formally developed this broad notion into the theory of priming (e.g., Iyengar & Kinder, 1987), which argues that the qualities and characteristics emphasized in media texts dictate how politicians are judged by the public (to be discussed further below). Ultimately, mass media do help cultivate impressions about politicians but should not be misconstrued to be the predominant influence. Conceptual & Methodological Question of Job Approval While the lion's share of both political science and mass communication literature assumes job approval to be the chief indicator of people's assessments of the Executive Branch, there are a slew of conceptual and methodological reasons for considering additional measures to evaluate the president. First, public appraisals of government officials certainly encompass more than mere job approval. Though perceived performance is critical, perceptions of personality traits also contribute to overall images of politicians (e.g., Popkin et al., 1976; Nimmo & Savage, 1976). For example, McCombs et al. (1997a), in study of Spanish elections, found that newspapers and voters used personality traits when describing political candidates more frequently than either qualifications or issue positions. Some of the more prominent personality traits to be affected by media coverage of government officials are integrity, ideals, sincerity, and honesty (Kinder, 1986; Edwards, 1983). Hence, public evaluations of politicians are multifaceted and operational definitions should therefore extend beyond simple job approval. In fact, Zukin & Carter (1982) write that "other ways of assessing presidential popularity may tap slightly different attitudes or may be more (or less) sensitive to changes in public attitudes toward the president" (p.215). As a result, favorability ratings and specific questions about personality traits, such as honesty or judgment, may help us hone in on other aspects of presidential evaluations-a strategy utilized in the current project. Beyond such theoretical problems, researchers have also raised methodological concerns regarding the job approval measure (Jones, 1994). Some of these include the sensitivity of the instrument, the extent to which it is an objective measure of popularity, its tendency to aggregate voters, and its heavy reliance on the Gallup poll (Zukin & Carter, 1982). In addition, a methodological obstacle not widely elaborated in the literature (but certainly pertinent) is determining the proper time lag to measure effects from the various factors, whether they be short-term (war), long-term (economic conditions), or both (media). Pinpointing the proper time lag to locate relationships is paramount because "there is always the danger that a causal effect will 'dissipate' over time if the researcher waits too long to measure it" (Chaffee, 1972, p.8). Specific to press influence, agenda setting theory sheds some light on this matter by suggesting that it takes approximately four to seven weeks for people's perceptions to change in response to fluctuations in media coverage (Winter & Eyal, 1981; Salwen, 1988), though this issue remains largely unresolved. For example, Wanta (1997a), in a meta-analysis that focused on differences in agenda setting effects among different media channels (print and broadcast), encountered scholarship documenting effects with time-lags ranging from a few days to six months. Meanwhile, Kepplinger et al. (1989) found that time lags of three months produce significant changes in public opinion. Consequently, this examination will integrate numerous lags to deal with the time problem but only to the point where they do not greatly hinder proper sample size. At this juncture, we have confirmed the necessity of widening the conceptualization of presidential evaluations beyond the domain of simple job approval. Nevertheless, a more detailed consideration of the political evaluation process is required. Primarily, theories that navigate the relationship between mass media and public opinion of politicians are especially helpful. Thus, priming, agenda setting, and attitude change theories are now explained to converge on how media coverage of political scandals shapes people's impressions of the president. Priming On a broad level, priming theory claims that media establish the standards that people employ to judge public officials (e.g., Iyengar & Simon, 1993; Krosnick & Kinder, 1990; Iyengar et al., 1982). As a consequence, priming theory is an invaluable asset for deepening our understanding of how media influence may operate during political scandals, such as the Monica Lewinsky affair. Miller & Krosnick (1997), for instance, assert that News media coverage of national policy issues_presumably affects evaluations of the president's general performance because all these issues touch on domains of presidential responsibility. Coverage of such issues may also sometimes affect evaluations of presidential character, but probably not as much as it affects presidential performance evaluations_News media coverage of national policy issues probably has even less impact on evaluations of a president's integrity, except when an issue is scandalous in nature (p.262, emphasis added).
This implicit distinction between personal assessments and performance evaluations hints that media attention to scandalous political stories may have divergent consequences on performance and personal ratings-a question pursued in this examination. In addition to simple attention to a topic, there are other factors that mediate priming effects. Miller & Krosnick (1997) maintain that priming effects are more pronounced for people with high knowledge of politics. Further, the specificity of a story will govern the degree to which people employ the guidelines communicated in that story to appraise politicians (Iyengar & Simon, 1993). Therefore, because the current presidential impeachment scandal has been displayed in more concrete terms (about specific people and events) in the news, we might expect some shift in public impressions of the presidency, although not necessarily on job approval. While priming is instrumental for outlining particular aspects of press influence on people's judgments about public officials, it is somewhat limited because much of the research has been experimental (i.e., artificial) and has usually probed television news instead of other media outlets. The larger theory of agenda setting bridges this gap by scrutinizing television and newspaper reporting patterns. The affiliation between agenda setting and priming is natural because "priming is really an extension of agenda-setting, and addresses the impact of news coverage on the weight assigned to specific issues in making political judgments" (Iyengar & Simon, 1993, p.250). Thus, agenda setting should further enhance our ability to sketch out how the public perceives politicians via mass media, especially with its recent expansion into the "second-level" (McCombs & Estrada, 1997). Agenda-Setting & Salience In its original conception, agenda setting theory posited that media controlled the priority of salient issues in public opinion (McCombs & Shaw, 1972). Specifically, the inventory of topics stressed by mainstream news organizations in their media texts corresponded to the hierarchy of "most important problems" nominated by people in public opinion surveys (Funkhouser, 1973). Of course, many factors mediate the size of agenda setting effects, such as education level (Wanta, 1997b), political interest (Erbring et al., 1980), and voter need for orientation (Weaver, 1977).[1] The need for orientation concept is particularly insightful for clarifying how public opinion may not be adversely affected by news about political scandals because people do not always have a pressing need or desire to attend to the media frenzy. Although the early research in agenda setting mainly concentrated on issues, candidate images have also been examined (e.g., Weaver et al., 1981), particularly the president (Wanta, 1992; Wanta et al, 1989)--a research stream relevant to the current project. Contemporary historical reviews of agenda setting delineate the process on two levels (McCombs et al., 1997b). At the first level, the degree of importance placed on an "object" (e.g., an issue, candidate, product, or whatever) by the media more or less influences the degree of prominence that "object" will receive in the public arena. At the second level, the "attributes" of objects emphasized in the media become central "attributes" in public conceptions of those same "objects" (McCombs & Evatt, 1995). An attribute can be thought of as a property, quality, or characteristic that describes an object (McCombs & Ghanem, 1998). In addition to modifying attribute salience, press emphasis on certain attributes is also believed to provide "compelling arguments" for audiences to alter their public concern about objects themselves (Ghanem, 1996, 1997). The evidence for the transfer of attribute salience from press to the public is growing (e.g., Benton & Frazier, 1976; Takeshita & Mikami, 1993; King, 1997), although it is not an unqualified media effect. Ordinarily, attributes have been designated as either substantive (cognitively grounded) or affective (emotionally grounded)--(e.g., Ghanem, 1997). The extent to which either type of attribute shifts public opinion is still a matter of controversy, but some literature suggests that affective characteristics may exert more influence (e.g., McCombs et al., 1997a). Agenda Setting & Attitude Change The transfer of salience from the press to the public is the core mechanism operating in the agenda setting process. Though salience remains important, an implicit assumption in agenda setting (that has received more attention recently) is that influencing an object's salience through attribute emphasis can partially shape public attitudes about that object as well (e.g., McCombs, & Shaw, 1993; McCombs et al., 1997). For example, McCombs & Estrada (1997) state that the Bernard Cohen's classic summary of the agenda-setting function of the press should be reformulated to say "the media may not only tell us what to think about, they also may tell us how and what to think about it, and even what to do about it" (p. 247; emphasis added). Of course, we must recognize that attitude change by no means occurs for all people in all cases as has been shown ad nauseum in research (e.g., Katz & Lazarsfeld, 1955; Hovland et al., 1953; Lazarsfeld et al., 1948); however, it is still necessary to explore how the process works if we are to further deepen the conceptualization of second-level agenda setting. One weakness with the current explication of second-level agenda setting is that it does not supply a theoretical map indicating how media emphasis on attributes might influence attitudes. For example, a vital question encompasses whether press emphasis on attributes can impact attitudes directly or must it first be mediated by affecting salience? To address this question, we must first scan some of the attitude change research that has permeated the field since its inception. Some of the more current persuasion research illustrates that salience (a.k.a. comprehension or learning) is integral to attitude change (e.g., Zaller, 1997) in some scenarios, but in others, it is not (e.g., McGuire, 1985). In fact, Petty & Priester (1994) argue that "the existing evidence shows that message comprehension and learning can occur in the absence of attitude change, and that a person's attitudes can change without learning the specific information in the communication" (p. 97). This leads us to ask how can we explicitly chart out the possible impact of second-level agenda setting on attitudes given these apparently conflicting observations? The attitude change perspective that seems best equipped to handle this question is the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) because it proposes that media messages can transform attitudes with or without changing salience, depending on the circumstances (Petty & Cacioppo, 1981; 1986). Specifically, two routes of persuasion exist that shape attitudes: central and peripheral. With the central route, people's attitudes are impacted by a high degree of cognitive activity, thereby suggesting that salience precedes attitude change. Conversely, the peripheral route of persuasion occurs when "simple cues in the persuasion context influence attitudes" (Petty & Priester, 1994, p. 101). Personal relevance has been identified as a driving force behind which path is likely to occur in people's minds (Burnkrant & Unnava, 1989), although several other variables are meaningful, including perceptions of credibility, liking, and consensus (O'Keefe, 1990). If attitude change does occur at all, a central route transpires when people perceive media messages as high in personal relevance, while a peripheral route functions when media messages are deemed low in personal relevance. Returning to second-level agenda setting, the ELM model would infer that media emphasis on attributes can modify salience and subsequently attitudes in some cases, or can influence attitudes directly in others, depending on how personally relevant people perceive the media messages to be. In the case of the Monica Lewinsky scandal then, logic dictates that a peripheral route seems more likely because, according to several media outlets, public opinion polls showed that people did not deem the investigation highly relevant (e.g., Berke & Elder, 1998; Grier & Thurman, 1998; Balz & Marcus, 1998). If this is true, we might also dub this as a "compelling arguments" hypothesis (Ghanem, 1997) because attribute salience in the media would be conjectured to be directly connected to shifts in public attitudes about an object, similar to its postulated link to object salience (Ghanem, 1996). Nevertheless, because we are at an early stage in the evolution of research tying agenda setting to attitude change, we must consider both central and peripheral routes plausible in this investigation (to be discussed in the next section). It is indeed ironic that agenda setting, which was initially conceived as a research stream in response to the limited effects model regarding attitude change (Lasorsa, 1997), is now coming full circle to address the question of attitude change that sparked its origin. As a result, one of the key goals in this study was to empirically test how the media's attribute agenda is connected to public attitudes by examining how press emphasis on the Monica Lewinsky scandal is linked to public evaluations of the presidency. In short, this study explored traditional agenda-setting influence on salience but also transcended its conventional boundaries into the sphere of attitudes.
Putting it All Together In relation to the current project, the conceptual framework offered by merging second-level agenda setting, priming, and the Elaboration Likelihood Model then enables us to better grasp the dynamics of how media coverage of the presidency might affect public opinion. This model is more expansive than other theoretical maps because it submits that press attention to a story can transform both overall opinions of the presidency on the first level (e.g., job approval or favorability) and on perceptions about specific dimensions of the presidency on the second level (e.g., personality traits). In order to depict exactly how the model operates in the current study, Figure 1 is displayed below. - - - Figure 1 Here - - - For the present study then, we might think of journalistic attention to the Monica Lewinsky story as an attribute of the broader coverage of Bill Clinton (the object). When probing the influence of this story on perceptions of personality traits, we are testing the bottom horizontal path of influence. Meanwhile, when probing the effects of this story on job approval, we are testing the diagonal or "compelling arguments" path of influence for salience. When exploring the direct path from attributes to favorability, we are looking at a peripheral route of persuasion. Finally, when tracing the path of media influence to favorability via job approval, we are looking at a central route of persuasion. Ideally, all paths should be investigated, but time and data constraints compelled us to only examine these four paths. Unfortunately, methodological procedures cannot always accommodate conceptual explications. Nonetheless, our approach should be sufficient in an exploratory study such as this, yet we still wanted to acknowledge the study's limitations up-front. For the purposes of this project, job approval was probably more of a salience measure because it is purported to monitor performance (substantive) and is certainly more of a cognitive measure since the salience of issues has been linked to fluctuations in job approval (e.g., Brody, 1991). Alternatively, favorability was probably more closely linked to attitudes because it seems to represent more of a personal assessment of the president (affective). Even though job approval is not a precise measure of "salience" because it entails both emotional and cognitive perceptions, we argue that this substitution was necessary because no standard salience question exists for politicians as it does for issues-i.e., the Gallup "most important problem" questions (Dearing & Rogers, 1996). On the other hand, favorability appears to be more clearly associated to attitudes. As a result, a noteworthy contribution that this analysis can make is to assess the value of using these measures in media analyses of the presidency. Agenda Setting Across Media Channels A final question that agenda setting theory raises is how did different media channels covering the Monica Lewinsky affair affect public opinion. In particular, which medium (newspapers of television) wielded more influence? As referred to earlier, priming theory's concentration on broadcast news suggests that television might be stronger (e.g., Miller & Krosnick, 1997). In agenda setting, the evidence is somewhat more mixed. For example, Wanta (1997a) reasons that "no clear trend emerges from the comparison of the studies on the magnitude of agenda-setting effects across media" (p.148). Still, the bulk of agenda-setting work appears to verify stronger effects for newspapers (Benton & Frazier, 1976; Schoenbach, 1982; Weaver, 1977). Indeed, Protess & McCombs (1991) articulate that "most studies that compare different media find that newspapers are more likely to produce issue salience" (p.98). As a result, since most agenda-setting work has found such a trend for issue salience, we suspect a similar pattern to surface for public opinion of the presidency as measured by job approval and favorability. By synthesizing the tenets of agenda setting, priming, and the Elaboration Likelihood Model of attitude change, we tested how media coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal was connected to fluctuations in public opinion of the presidency. Hypotheses & Research Questions A series of hypotheses and research questions were formulated based on the previous literature review. Anchored in the priming and agenda setting literature that has depicted a hierarchical relationship between mass media coverage of politics and public opinion, the following hypothesis is posed: H1: Changes in public opinion about the president will be more strongly linked to media coverage preceding public opinion polls than to simultaneous or subsequent media coverage.
Based on the agenda-setting scholarship reporting a stronger relationship between newspapers and public opinion than for television and public opinion (e.g., Schoenbach, 1982), the following hypothesis is offered: H2: Newspapers will be more strongly linked to public opinion shifts than television coverage.
Based on our discussion of presidential evaluations, priming, attitude change, and second-level agenda setting, the following research questions are submitted: RQ1: Will media attention to the Monica Lewinsky scandal will be correlated with shifts in public opinion about presidential attributes?
RQ2: Will changes in overall public opinion about the president be uniform or divergent with regard to favorability and job approval?
RQ3: Will any observed attitude change best be characterized by a peripheral or central route of persuasion?
RQ4: How strongly associated will media coverage be with public evaluations of the president when integrating the impact of other factors?
Method Sample A longitudinal time-series design was employed to track the impact of media coverage on public opinion. Media content and public opinion surveys were monitored from Jan. 19-Nov 1., 1998. This beginning date was selected simply because it was the first week that the Monica Lewinsky story appeared in elite media. The Nov. 1 end date was more of a subjective decision but was made because the coverage ensuing the 1998 elections held on Nov. 3 largely focused on the upcoming impeachment hearings, which we believed would confound the effects of the original story and therefore, damage the study's validity. Furthermore, election day seemed like a natural point to complete such an investigation. The time increment utilized for this project was one week, simultaneously permitting precise measurement of time-lags and generating an adequate sample of weeks (N=41). Media Content A content analysis of New York Times newspapers and ABC World News Tonight broadcasts was performed to gauge media attention to the Monica Lewinsky scandal. These two news organizations were chosen because they are prime examples of elite, national media outlets (e.g., Zhu & Boroson, 1997; Dearing & Rogers, 1996). The following search strings were used in the Lexis / Nexis database to collect the total sample of stories. For the New York Times (n=282 stories), an example search string looked like this: "date is aft jan. 18 1998 and bef Nov. 2 1998 and section a or section 1 and page 1 and president or clinton and lewinsky." A similar search string was used for ABC news (n=187 stories). Simple frequencies were employed to determine the volume of media coverage per week (unit of analysis), a technique found to be fairly reliable by other scholars (e.g., Stone & McCombs, 1981). Before continuing, it should be noted that several steps were taken to strengthen the study's validity and reliability. First, articles had to appear on the front page of the New York Times to ensure they were prominently displayed. Such a procedure was not utilized for ABC World News Tonight content because the intrinsic time-constraint of television news predetermines that the stories inserted in the daily broadcasts were the "most important" of the day. Further, the number of stories from each news outlet becomes more balanced when comparing content in this manner. Second, the use of general rather than specific key words was intentional, allowing us to obtain an aggregate measure of the story's impact. Finally, coder reliability was assessed on a subsample of the stories by having an independent human coder validate the sample collected by Lexis / Nexis. Holsti's intercoder reliability figures for the subsample was 88 percent.[2] While not perfect, we believe the sample of stories collected from both news organizations functioned as a fairly representative portrayal of how mass media reported the scandal. Public Opinion To measure perceptions about the presidency, composite indices of several public opinion polls were created. This was an integral step for securing an appropriate sample of surveys. As touched on in the theoretical section, second level agenda setting served as the core conceptual framework for this study. Thus, object salience had to be operationally defined (first-level). Object salience was gauged by presidential job approval as scored by ABC News/Washington Post, CNN/Time, FOX, and Gallup polls (alpha=.96). These numbers represent the percentage of people who "approve" of the job the president is doing in running the country.[3] Beyond object salience, public attitudes towards to presidency also had to be operationally defined. In this instance, public attitudes were calibrated by presidential favorability ratings as scored by ABC News/Washington Post, CBS/New York Times, CNN/Time, and Gallup polls (alpha=.91). These numbers stand for the percentage of people who have a "favorable" opinion of the president in general.[4] In addition to first-level measures, it was imperative that we operationalize attribute salience (second-level) as well. Gallup poll questions about the president's personal characteristics acted as the attribute salience variables because other data that might be conceptualized in this way were scant. Due to the scarcity of this data (n=3 to n=5), no distinction was made between substantive and affective attributes, yet future research should probably integrate this dichotomy into similar analyses. Moreover, the problems with this data forced us to only examine one of the peripheral and central paths of persuasion. Nevertheless, confirmation or rejection of those paths will shed some light on the matter of attitude change in second-level agenda setting. The particular qualities measured for the study were honesty, competence, and judgment.[5] Time Lags As outlined earlier, it was essential that we test for relationships at multiple time-lags to locate any potential linkages between press attention and public conceptions of the president. Though the range of optimal time-lags has varied in research (e.g., Winter & Eyal, 1981; Jablonski & Hester, 1998), a six-week window was adopted for this study for two key reasons: (1) most scholarship detects at least some relationship within this amount of time (e.g., Salwen, 1988; Zucker, 1978; Wanta & Hu, 1994); and (2) venturing beyond this boundary impairs sample size to the point where statistical reliability could become a problem. While we surmised that media influence would precede changes in public opinion, there was always the possibility that they would move synchronously or that public opinion swings would precede shifts in media coverage. As a result, a six-week time-lag was utilized in two directions to ensure that all three types of relationships could be observed. Data Analysis Pearson cross-lagged correlations were calculated to ascertain whether a linkage existed between media coverage of the scandal and public opinion of the presidency, except when sample size was small in which case Spearmann rho correlations were used (i.e., for attribute salience). McCall (1994) recommends such nonparametric tests when dealing with smaller sample sizes. When suitable, multivariate techniques (partial correlations) were employed to analyze a number of variables concomitantly. The study's research design allowed us to efficiently test the hypotheses and explore the research questions. To test Hypothesis 1, for example, the number and size of correlations revealed whether media coverage moved public opinion, they moved together, or public opinion led media coverage. Likewise, for Hypothesis 2, the number and size of correlations also exposed which news channel was more closely related to fluctuations in public opinion. Correlations between media coverage and Gallup poll data on presidential characteristics addressed Research Question 1. Research Question 2 was investigated by scrutinizing the general direction of first-level correlations. For Research Question 3, we examined the direct relationship between media coverage and attitudes to test the peripheral path of persuasion. Subsequently, we tested whether the influence of media coverage on public salience mediated the relationship between press coverage and perceived favorability (via partial correlations), thereby exploring a central route of persuasion. In the words, we checked if the relationship between media coverage and attitude change could remain strong when the impact of media coverage on public salience was removed. Lastly, partial correlations demonstrated how well press attention to the Monica Lewinsky story was connected to public assessments of the president in the face of other factors (time and economic indicators) for Research Question 4.[6] Results H1: Changes in public opinion about the president will be more strongly linked to media coverage preceding public opinion polls than to simultaneous or subsequent media coverage.
The findings support Hypothesis 1 for favorability and moderately support it for job approval. Media coverage appears to precede shifts in public opinion with more frequency than public opinion swings precede changes in press attention (or fluctuate synchronously). Tables 1 and 2 are presented below summarizing the data. - - - Insert Table 1 Here - - - - - - Insert Table 2 Here - - - For presidential favorability, the ratio of significant (p<.05) cross-lagged correlations with media coverage preceding public opinion changes to correlations with media coverage changes following public opinion shifts is 2 to 0. For job approval, the evidence is more mixed because no correlations reach statistical significance, although the relationship between media coverage three weeks prior to public opinion polls does approach significance (r=.29; p<.10). On the whole then, it seems that media coverage precedes changes in public assessments of the presidency. H2: Newspapers will be more strongly linked to public opinion shifts than television coverage.
The data are mixed with regard to this hypothesis for favorability but appears to be modestly supported for job approval. Referring back to Table 1, newspaper and television coverage are both substantially connected to public opinion in one instance each, thereby making their influence appear shared. When taking into account the size and significance level of the cross-lagged correlations, television is slightly stronger, but the difference is so minute that we conclude their influence to be equal for favorability. However, more definitive generalizations about the effects of different media channels cannot be drawn until we look at the correlations for job approval. A different image emerges from the job approval data. Returning the Table 2, the only noteworthy correlation (p<.10) occurs for newspapers, hinting that this was the more influential medium. Nevertheless, the lack of significance shows the relationship is not all that strong. Generally then, it seems that newspapers and television both play strong complementary roles with respect to favorability, but newspaper coverage is marginally more related to job approval shifts. RQ1: Will media attention to the Monica Lewinsky scandal will be correlated with shifts in public opinion about presidential attributes?
Before presenting these results, it should be remembered that the sample sizes for the findings on presidential attributes were extremely small (between n=3 to n=5) due to scarce data availability, making all those correlations highly tentative. Therefore, we recommend that these findings only be used to suggest whether a relationship exists or not, and certainly nothing should be extrapolated about the direction of such linkages. Similar to overall judgments about the president, the data imply that a relationship operates between press attention to political scandals and people's perceptions about a government official's personal characteristics. Unlike general assessments of the presidency, the relationship seems to be more reciprocal and shared. Tables 3, 4, and 5 reflect these trends. - - - Insert Table 3 Here - - - - - - Insert Table 4 Here - - - - - - Insert Table 5 Here - - - Collectively, it appears there are connections between media coverage and public perceptions of presidential competence, honesty, and judgment. The mixture of positive and negative correlations is confusing but could probably be explained had we accounted for tone in the study's content analysis. Regardless, these data lend some credence to second-level agenda setting and priming effects, although additional research should be executed to confirm these associations. RQ2: Will changes in overall public opinion about the president be uniform or divergent with regard to favorability and job approval?
According to Tables 1 & 2, it seems that the shifts in public opinion of the president move in divergent directions when responding to press coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Specifically, favorability appears to be negatively linked (all significant correlations are negative), while job approval seems to be positively associated (the one meaningful correlations is positive). In addition, the general direction of favorability correlations is negative, while job approval correlations are positive. Hence, higher press scrutiny of the scandal was related to negative perceptions of favorability but was associated to positive opinions about job performance. The divergent trends demonstrate that presidential evaluations are multidimensional-a point to be further considered in the subsequent section. RQ3: Will any observed attitude change best be characterized by a peripheral or central route of persuasion?
Findings suggest that the observed public attitude change in the Monica Lewinsky scandal is best characterized by a peripheral route of persuasion. To answer this research question, we converged on the time-point when media attention to the scandal was connected to a shift in public attitudes (perceived favorability at time-lag 6). As stated for Hypothesis 1, zero-order correlations between media coverage six weeks prior to changes in perceived favorability are both significant (ABC News r=-.54, p<.01; NYT r=-.47, p<.05). Thus, a peripheral (direct) path of attitude change appears plausible here, but we still needed to look for intervening variables. Two partial correlation coefficients (for television and newspapers), which removed the impact of press coverage on job approval (i.e., public salience), were computed to deal with this problem. If the correlations decreased, this would imply that public salience mediates the relationship between media coverage of attributes and shifts in public attitudes. Alternatively, if the correlations remained stable or increased, this would verify a more direct relationship.[7] Specifically, we controlled for the influence of media coverage on job approval at lag 3 and 6: lag 3 because it was the only point when media impact on salience approached statistical significance; and lag 6 because it represented the period that coincided with public attitude change. Ideally, we would have liked to control for the influence of all prior media coverage on public salience but could not because sample size became a concern when integrating all lags. In both cases, the correlations remained stable (ABC News r=-.59, p<.01; NYT r=-.55, p<.05). Accordingly, a peripheral route of persuasion appears more likely than a central route for explaining observed attitude change during the Monica Lewinsky scandal. RQ4: How strongly associated will media coverage be with public evaluations of the president when integrating the impact of other factors?
Here, we converged on the time points when media coverage were most influential (at time lag -6 for favorability and time lag 3 for job approval), allowing us to comprehensively scrutinize this phenomenon. To review, time and economic indicators (Consumer Price Index and Consumer Confidence) were employed as control variables because of their known influence on presidential assessments (Simonton, 1987; Stimson, 1976). Partial correlations (controlling for time, Consumer Confidence, and the Consumer Price Index) report that the relationship between media coverage and public opinion is robust for favorability (ABC News r=-.42, p<.05; NYT r=-.40, p<.10) but weak for job approval (NYT r=-.03, n.s.). Therefore, it seems that media coverage remains strongly associated to public assessments of the presidency in terms of valence but not salience. Discussion Methodological Concerns Prior to discussing the implications of this research, it would be helpful to enumerate some of its methodological shortcomings. One caveat was that the public opinion data were extracted from many different sources and may not be comparable. Nevertheless, this step was necessary to obtain an adequate sample of surveys. Further, the high alpha reliability scores (alpha>.90) demonstrated that the surveys were essentially chronicling parallel trends and could be aggregated legitimately. Another concern entailed the small sample of data for monitoring public opinion about presidential attributes. Again, this was inevitable given the dearth of this type of data. While the sample is small, our tentative approach in drawing generalizations enabled this study to function as pretest for future empirical work in this area and is valuable in this capacity. A related concern involves our failure to directly compare all central and peripheral routes of persuasion, but this initial look at attitudes in second-level agenda setting, at least, hints at which route is more feasible. Finally, the use of only front-page newspaper stories and national television newscasts affords a constrained view of the wide ranging media content available for the Monica Lewinsky scandal. On the other hand, this strategy supplied a manageable sample of data and isolated salient news. Consequently, it was appropriate for an exploratory study such as this. Implications & Conclusions There are many directions future researchers might embark upon in light of the current findings, especially in the fields of mass communication and political science. The fact that media coverage led shifts in public opinion reveals that press attention to governmental scandals shapes public opinion of politicians. Though many pundits dismissed such influence, the current project illustrates that researchers must be willing to look beyond the short-term trends in public opinion that media and Washington elites expect. Thus, this study confirms the utility of time-series designs. While causality cannot be demonstrated, such approaches are crucial for detecting important relationships because of their rigorous and systematic nature. Had we only adopted a cross-sectional scheme, we would have deduced that media influence was minimal and erred in the same way as countless Washington and media pundits. As a consequence, researchers would be wise to further explore how media coverage of scandals is connected to public opinion in other settings, implementing time-series designs, to either verify or disprove the patterns documented in this study. The mutual impact of newspaper and television coverage on favorability is pertinent because it implies a more complementary relationship between media channels on public attitudes during political scandals. On the other hand, the minimal association evident between newspaper coverage and job approval conforms more to a traditional agenda-setting model with newspapers wielding more influence. The discrepancy in the results may lie in the fact that our hypothesis was grounded in agenda setting (which focuses on salience), but favorability is more of an attitude. Consequently, the agenda-setting model worked better for the salience measure (job approval) than for the attitude measure (favorability). By building on the findings of the current investigation, future work may want to further concentrate on the differences in medium impact for political scandals with respect to attitudes and cognitions. Moreover, expanding such work into the realm of radio and the Internet is paramount for understanding the dynamics of how different media inform people's impressions about political scandals. As asserted earlier, the findings grant some support to the notion of second-level agenda setting. Further, the influence of media coverage on presidential evaluations mounts evidence for priming and attitude change as well. The theoretical model advanced herein affords a framework for subsequent research to continue and explicate the process. For example, the hybrid use of ELM, priming, and second-level agenda setting helps explain why a peripheral route to attitude change was not surprising given the low levels of personal relevance that the public exhibited toward the story. Therefore, future inquiries should probe how different types of media coverage shape both overall impressions about politicians and perceptions of their personal attributes. Isolating what exact aspects of Executive images are likely to be affected by press coverage is important for both scholars and political consultants alike. Combining such research with traditional agenda-setting scholarship on issue salience will supply a more holistic image of how news forms social reality. The divergent linkages among press scrutiny, favorability, and job approval expose that presidential evaluations are multifaceted. We account for the divergent findings by arguing that job approval is more of a substantive (cognitive) evaluation, while favorability is more of an affective (valence) judgment (as described in the literature review). In terms of comparing substantive and affective elements, the stronger impact on favorability shows that the effects of attribute salience on attitudes deserve more scrutiny. In addition, it demonstrates the necessity of further bridging the ELM and second-level agenda setting models to better sketch out this process. Political scientists and mass communication scholars should begin examining both dimensions of public assessments (cognitions & attitudes). Limiting research to only one half of the equation precludes theoretical advancement of candidate image scholarship. The ability of media coverage to foster some changes in public assessments of the president, even in multivariate analyses, corroborates the statistical findings of other researchers (e.g., Brody, 1991. However, the weakness of media influence on perceived job approval shows that this pattern only occurs in some cases. It is imperative that analysts continue to employ multivariate research designs because the relationships among media, government, and the public are so highly complicated and intertwined that many relationships will go unnoticed without such methods. In sum, it is hoped that this project established the value of monitoring media coverage of political scandals for better understanding how public assessments of government officials are cast. Notes Figures & Tables Figure 1: 1st & 2nd Level Agenda Setting for Monica Lewinsky Scandal
[--- Pict Graphic Goes Here ---]
Note: Lines reflect possible paths of salience transfer and attitude influence.
Table 1: Cross-Lagged Correlations Between Media Covg. & Favorability of President
Media Precedes P.O. P.O. Precedes Media
-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 wk 1 2 3 4 5 6 ABC -.54 ** -.12
.15
-.17
.10
.22
-.09
.01
.13
-.17
-.10
.07
.00
NYT -.47 * -.30
-.11
-.30
-.24
-.03
-.31
-.27
-.18
-.35
-.25
-.05
-.06
*p<.05 **p<.01 Note: Values represent the correlation between the number of stories about the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the percentage of people rating saying their overall opinion of Bill Clinton is favorable. Time lags are computed in one-week increments.
Table 2: Cross-Lagged Correlations Between Media Covg. & Job Approval of President
Media Precedes P.O. P.O. Precedes Media
-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 wk 1 2 3 4 5 6 ABC .11 .07
.20
.12
.15
.25
-.21
.-.14
-.09
-.11
.06
-.03
-.17
NYT .24
.21
.21
.29 * .21
.22
.05
-.18
-.08
-.10
-.01
-.02
-.02
*p<.10
Note: Values represent the correlation between the number of stories about the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the percentage of people rating saying they approve of the way Bill Clinton is handling his job as president. Time lags are computed in one-week increments.
Table 3: Cross-Lagged Spearmann Rho Correlations Between Media Covg. & Competence ("Can get things done")
Media Precedes P.O. P.O. Precedes Media
-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 wk 1 2 3 4 5 6 ABC 1 * 1 * .87
.87
.5
-.32
-1 * -.60
-.79
-.36
-.15
-.67
.11
NYT .87
1 * .5
.5
1 * -.20
-.60
-.87 * -.82
-.21
-.36
-.15
-.10
*p<.05
Note: Values represent the correlation between the number of stories about the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the percentage of people rating saying Bill Clinton can "get things done." Time lags are computed in one-week increments.
Table 4: Cross-Lagged Spearmann Rho Correlations Between Media Covg. & Honesty
Media Precedes P.O. P.O. Precedes Media
-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 wk 1 2 3 4 5 6 ABC -.50
.00
-.5
-1 ** -1 ** .94 ** .05
.87 * .50
-.10
-.22
-.15
.62
NYT .5
.5
-.5
-1 ** -.87
.32
.21
.87 * .60
-.10
-.21
-.36
-.10
*p<.05
Note: Values represent the correlation between the number of stories about the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the percentage of people rating saying Bill Clinton is "honest and trustworthy." Time lags are computed in one-week increments.
Table 5: Cross-Lagged Spearmann Rho Correlations Between Media Covg. & Judgment
Media Precedes P.O. P.O. Precedes Media
-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 wk 1 2 3 4 5 6 ABC .50
.86
.5
-.5
-.5
.33
-.95 * .00
-.32
-.95 * -1 * -.63
.32
NYT 1 * 1 * .50
-.50
-.86
-.50
-.83
.00
.32
-.95 * -1 * -.50
-.63
*p<.05
Note: Values represent the correlation between the number of stories about the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the percentage of people rating saying Bill Clinton "shows good judgment." Time lags are computed in one-week increments.
References
Balz, D., & Marcus, R. (1998, July 29). Deal's effect on president, politics is debated. Washington Post (Section A, page A01).
Benton, M., & Frazier, P. (1976). The agenda setting function of the mass media at three levels of "information holding." Communication Research 3, 261-274.
Berke, R.L., & Elder, J. (1998, Sep.16). Testing of a president: The public; keeping Clinton in office, most say in poll, but his image is eroding. New York Times (section a, page 1, column 1).
Brody, R.A. (1991). Assessing the President. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Brody, R.A., & Page, B.L. (1975). The Impact of Events of Presidential Popularity: The Johnson and Nixon Administrations. In A. Wildavsky (ed.), Perspectives on the American Presidency. Boston: Little Brown.
Burnkrant, R., & Unnava, R. (1989). Self-referencing: A strategy for increasing processing of message content. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 15, 628-638.
Chaffee, S.H. (1972). Longitudinal designs for communication research: Cross-lagged correlations. Paper presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Carbondale, Illinois.
Chaffee, S.H. (1991). Communication Concepts 1 Explication. London: Sage.
Dearing, J.W., & Rogers, E.M. (1996). Communication Concepts 6 Agenda-Setting. London: Sage.
Edwards, G.C. (1993). The Public Presidency. New York, New York: St. Martin's Press.
Erbring, L., Goldenberg, E.N., & Miller, A.H. (1980). Front-page news and real world cues: A new look at agenda-setting by the media. American Journal of Political Science 24, 16-49.
Funkhouser, G.R. (1973). The issues of the sixties: An explicatory study of the dynamics of public opinion. Public Opinion Quarterly 37, 62-75.
Ghanem, S. (1997). Filling in the tapestry: The second level of agenda-setting. In M. McCombs, D.L. Shaw, & D. Weaver (Eds.), Communication and Democracy(pp.3-14). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
Graber, D.A. (1982). Conclusions: Linkage successes and failures. In D. Graber (Ed.), The President & the Public (pp.260-286). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Institute for the Study of Human Issues, Inc.
Grier, P., & Thurman, J.N. (1998, Aug. 31). Why the political split between public and washington elite. Christian Science Monitor (Section United States, Political Memo, page 3).
Hovland, C.I., Janis, I.L., & Kelley, H.H. (1953). Communication and Persuasion. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press.
Iyengar, S., Peters, M.D., & Kinder, D.R. (1982). Experimental demonstrations of the 'not so minimal' consequences of television news programs. American Political Science Review 76,4, 848-58.
Iyengar, S., & Kinder, D.R. (1987). News that Matters. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Iyengar, S., & Simon, A. (1993). News coverage of the Gulf Crisis and public opinion: A study of agenda setting, priming, and framing. In S. Iyengar & R. Reeves (Eds.) Do the Media Govern? Politicians, Voters, and Reporters in America (pp. 248-257). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Jablonski, P.M., & Hester, J.B. (1998, November). A Longitudinal Time Series Analysis of Agenda Setting for the Education Issue: The Agendas of the President, the Media, and the Public. Paper presented to the 1998 Southwest Symposium of the Southwest Education Council for Journalism and Mass Communication.
Jones, C.O. (1994). The Presidency in a Separated System. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution.
Katz, E., & Lazarsfeld, P.F. (1955). Personal Influence: The Part Played by People in the Flow of Mass Communication. Glencoe, Illinois: Free Press.
Kepplinger, H.M., Donsbach, W., Brosius, H.,-B., & Staab, J.F. (1989). Media tone and public opinion: A longitudinal study of media coverage and public opinion of Chancellor Kohl. International Journal of Public Opinion Research 1, 326-342.
Kinder, D. (1986). Presidential character revisited. In R. Lau & D. Sears (Eds.), Political Cognition. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
King, P. (1997). The press, candidate images, and voter perceptions. In M. McCombs, D.L. Shaw, & D. Weaver (Eds.), Communication and Democracy (pp.29-40). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
Krosnick, J.A., & Kinder, D.R. (1990). Altering the foundations of support for the president through priming. American Political Science Review 84, 2, 497-512.
Lazarsfeld, P.E., Berelson, B.R., & Gaudet, H. (1948). The People's Choice. New York: Columbia University Press.
McCall, R.B. (1994). Fundamental Statistics for Behavioral Sciences. San Francisco, CA: Duxburry Press.
McCombs, M.E., & Shaw, D.L. (1972). The agenda-setting function of mass media. Public Opinion Quarterly 36, 176-187.
McCombs, M.E., & Shaw, D.L. (1993). The evolution of agenda-setting research: Twenty-five years in the marketplace of ideas. Journal of Communication 43, 2, 58-65.
McCombs. M.E., & Evatt, D. (1995). Issues and attributes: Exploring a new dimension in agenda setting. Communicacion y Sociedad 8, 1, 7-32.
McCombs, M., & Estrada, G. (1997). The news media and the pictures in our heads. In S. Iyengar & R. Reeves (Eds.), Do the Media Govern? (pp. 237-247). London: Sage
McCombs, M., Llamas, J.P., Lopez-Escobar, E., & Rey, F. (1997a). Candidate images in Spanish elections: second-level agenda-setting effects. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 74,4, 703-717.
McCombs, M.E., Shaw, D.L., & Weaver, D. (1997b). Prologue: "The game is afoot." In M. McCombs, D.L. Shaw, & D. Weaver (Eds.), Communication and Democracy (pp.ix-xii). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
McCombs, M.E., & Ghanem, S. (1998). The convergence of agenda-setting and framing. Unpublished manuscript. University of Texas at Austin.
McGuire, W.J. (1985). Attitudes and attitude change. In G. Lindzet & E. Aronson (Eds.), Handbook of Social Psychology (3rd ed., Vol 2., pp. 233-346). New York: Random House.
Miller, J.M., & Krosnick, J.A. (1997). Anatomy of news media priming. In S. Iyengar & R. Reeves (Eds.), Do the Media Govern? (pp. 258-275). London: Sage.
Mitchell, A., & Elder, J. (1998, Oct. 15) Congress's rating continues to slip in inquiry's wake. New York Times (Section A, Page 1, Column 6).
Mueller, J.E. (1970). Presidential Popularity from Truman to Johnson. American Political Science Review 64, 18-34.
Nimmo, D., & Savage, R.L. (1976). Candidates and their Images: Concepts, methods, and findings. Santa Monica, California: Goodyear.
O'Keefe, D.J. (1990). Persuasion Theory and Research. Newbury Park, C.A.: Sage.
Petty, R.E., & Cacioppo, J.T. (1981). Attitudes and Persuasion: Classic and Contemporary Approaches. Dubuque: Wm. C. Brown.
Petty, R.E., & Cacioppo, J.T. (1986). Communication and Persuasion: Central and Peripheral Routes to Attitude Change. New York: Springer/Verlag.
Petty, R.E., & Priester, J.R. (1994). Mass media attitude change: Implications of the elaboration likelihood model of persuasion. In J. Bryan & D. Zillmann (Eds.), Media Effects: Advances in Theory and Research (pp. 91-122). New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Popkin, S., Gorman, J., Phillips, C., & Smith, J. (1976). Comment: what have you done for me lately: toward an investment theory of voting. American Political Science Review 80, 779-805.
Protess, D.L., & McCombs, M.E. (1991). Part III: The agenda-setting process. In D.L. Protess & M. McCombs (Eds.), Agenda Setting. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Roberts, M. (1997). Political Advertising's Influence on News, the Public and Their Behavior. In M. McCombs, D.L. Shaw, & D. Weaver (Eds.), Communication and Democracy (pp.85-98). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Salwen, M.B. (1988). Effect of accumulation coverage on issue salience in agenda setting. Journalism Quarterly 65, 100-106, 130.
Schoenbach, K. (1982). Agenda-Setting Effects of Print and Television in West Germany. Paper presented at the International Communication Association annual conference.
Simonton, D.K. (1987). Why Presidents Succeed. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press.
Stimson, J.A. (1976). Public Support for American Presidents: A Cyclical Model. Public Opinion Quarterly 40, 1-21.
Stone, G.C., & McCombs, M.E. (1981). Tracing the time lag in agenda-setting. Journalism Quarterly 58, 151-155.
Takeshita, T., & Mikami, S. (1995). How did the mass media influence the voters' choice in the 1993 general election in Japan? A study of agenda-setting. Keiko Communication Review 17, 27-41.
Wanta, W., Stephenson, M.A., Turk, J., & McCombs, M.E. (1989). How president's state of the union talk influenced news media agenda. Journalism Quarterly 66, 537-541.
Wanta, W., & Hu, Y. (1994). Time-lag differences in the agenda-setting process: An examination of five news media. International Journal of Public Opinion Research 6, 225-240.
Wanta, A. (1992). The influence of the president on the news media and public agendas. Mass Comm Review 19, 3, 14-21, 48.
Wanta, W. (1997a). The messenger and the message: differences across news media. In M. McCombs, D.L. Shaw, & D. Weaver (Eds.), Communication and Democracy (pp.137-151). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Wanta, W. (1997b). The Public and The National Agenda. Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Weaver, D.H. (1977). Political issues and voter need for orientation. In D.L. Shaw & M.E. McCombs (Eds.), The Emergence of American Political issues: The Agenda-Setting Function of the Press (pp.107-120. St. Paul, Minnesota: West Publishing.
Weaver, D.H., Graber, D.A., McCombs, M.E., Eyal, C.H. (1981). Media agenda- setting in a presidential election. New York: Praeger.
Winter, J., & Eyal, C. (1981). Agenda setting for the civil rights issue. Public Opinion Quarterly 45, 376-383.
Zaller, J.R. (1997). A model of communication effects at the outbreak of the gulf war. In S. Iyengar & R. Reeves (Eds.), Do the Media Govern? (pp. 296-311). London: Sage
Zhu, J.H., & Boroson, W. (1997). Susceptibility to agenda setting: A cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis of individual differences. In M. McCombs, D.L. Shaw, & D. Weaver (Eds.), Communication and Democracy (pp.69-84). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Zucker, H.G. (1978). The variable nature of news media influence. In B. D. Ruben (Ed.), Communication Yearbook 2 (pp. 225-245). New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.
Zukin, C., & Carter, J.R., Jr. (1982). The measurement of presidential popularity: old wisdoms and new concerns. In D. Graber (Ed.),The President & the Public (pp.207-241). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Institute for the Study of Human Issues, Inc. [1] Voter need for orientation is comprised of three factors: "the degree of (1) interest in the message content; (2) uncertainty about the subject of the message; and (3) effort required to attend to the message (including the perceived likelihood that a reliable source of information is available" (Weaver, 1977, p.131). [2] The subsample was comprised of every 10th story from ABC News and every 10th article from the New York Times. [3] Normally, the question was worded in the following manner: "Do you approve or disapprove of the way Bill Clinton is handling his job as president?" [4] The basic wording for the favorability questions was: "What is your overall opinion of Bill Clinton - is it favorable or unfavorable (or have you never heard of him)?" It should be noted though that the range of questions varied more for favorability than job approval. [5] Honesty, competence, and judgment questions were worded as follows. First interviewers said "I'm going to read off some personal characteristics and qualities. As I read each one, tell me if you think it strongly applies to Bill Clinton, somewhat applies, or doesn't apply. First_Next." The specific phrases were "can get things done," honest and trustworthy," and "shows good judgment." Gallup aggregated answers into "applies" / "does not apply" categories, which were utilized in the data analysis phase of this project. [6] The specific economic indicators used were consumer confidence and the consumer price index in order to gauge both fiscal performance and perceptions of economic health. [7] Hypothetically, a spurious correlation between variables a (media coverage) & b (public attitudes) might exist because both are correlated to a third variable c (public salience) that intervenes between the two (McCall, 1994). A partial correlation coefficient allows us to test how direct the relationship between variables a & b is. Thus, we can deduce whether a peripheral route of attitude change is more likely, based on the value of the correlation coefficient.
|