11:00 - 12:30
Parallel sessions 8
11:00 - 12:30
Room: HSZ - N4
Chair/s:
Asya Achimova
Verbal communication can act as social glue, facilitating group coherence, or as a social repellent antagonizing people against each other. In this symposium, we bring together social psychologists, psycholinguists, and media scientists to ask how communication strategies have evolved in the age of polarization. While much of the literature on political polarization is based on the U.S. landscape, our workshop brings attention to polarization in Europe. The work of Asya Achimova addresses this question by looking at how speakers in these two cultural spaces choose indirect ways to signal their opinions on societally relevant topics. Her results suggest that German speakers prefer more direct ways of communicating opinions when topics are particularly controversial. We then turn to conversational strategies of Dutch speakers and their use of hedging expressions, such as ‘I think’. Liesje Van der Linden investigates how these hedges affect the perception of polarization in discourse. These psycholinguistic studies set the stage for studies of polarizing content in social media. Jürgen Buder will share insights into understanding social media communication strategies in German and US discourse. Gerrit Anders will then take this debate to the actual comments section of the German media outlet “Der Spiegel” and evaluate what types of comments users most often engage with, showing that users are more likely to engage with opposing view and express antagonistic opinions. Looking at the conflicting findings of Jürgen Buder in experimental settings and the findings of Gerrit Anders in field settings will allow us to discuss the role of antagonism in increasing polarization. Finally, we plan to engage with the possible interventions that aim at reducing polarization. Ximeng Fang will share his recent work on a large-scare experimental intervention in which individuals in Germany were matched to form either pairs with congruent or incongruent political views. He will discuss how confronting opposing people affected their antagonism, and whether bringing together similarly-minded individuals increased the risk of creating echo-chambers. In sum, we will look into the role of cultural expectations, personality characteristics of individuals, and the controversy of topics to investigate how they shape communication strategies.
 
Submission 295
Populist Rhetorics in the Media and Acknowledging Subjectivity in Online Discussions
SymposiumTalk-02
Presented by: Liesje van der Linden
Liesje van der LindenCarla RoosEmiel Krahmer
Tilburg Univeristy, Netherlands
Today's society is often perceived as more polarized than it actually is (Dekker & den Ridder, 2022) and online debates seem to harden. Previous research has shown that perceived polarization can be decreased within online discussions by adding explicit marking of subjectivity to opinions, e.g. ‘I think that…’ (Roos et al., 2025). Polarization however sharply increases through populism (Robberts, 2022), which is omnipresent in online debates (Galpin and Trenz, 2019; van der Linden et al., 2025). As populist rhetorics generally do not acknowledge subjectivity (Neubert & Reich, 2018), the current study explores the relationship between populist rhetorics in the media and the positive effect that subjectivity marking has on online discussions. To do so, we conducted a within-subject experiment in which participants read two online news articles followed by 8 comments. The articles were manipulated to either contain a political rhetoric that increased populist attitudes, or one that did not. Half the comments were manipulated to contain explicit subjectivity marking, whereas the other half lacked such marking. The participants had to rate the comments individually on a scale from 0-100, to indicate how well the comment contributed to the overall discussion. Additionally we measured the participants willingness to participate in the discussion, and invited them to write their own contribution. Our preliminary analysis shows that the positive effect of subjectivity marking is also present on the level of individual comments, independently of the rhetoric used in the preceding news article.