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Many studies of media effects use self-reported news expo- sure as their key independent variable without establishing its validity. Motivated by anecdotal evidence that people's reports of their own me- dia use can differ considerably from independent assessments, this study examines systematically the accuracy of survey-based self-reports of news exposure. I compare survey estimates to Nielsen estimates, which do not rely on self-reports. Results show severe overreporting of news exposure. Survey estimates of network news exposure follow trends in Nielsen ratings relatively well, but exaggerate exposure by a factor of 3 on average and as much as eightfold for some demographics. It follows that apparent media effects may arise not because of differences in ex- posure, but because of unknown differences in the accuracy of reporting exposure.
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Markus Prior
Princeton University
Public Opinion Quarterly
Princeton University
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Markus Prior (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dc9ecca5c75be4cfe53358 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/poq/nfp002
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