Abstract Do people learn about the political world through online media? We address this question by exploiting an unexpected global news event—the Russian invasion of Ukraine—and by developing exogenous measures of media exposure based on three months of web-tracking data from five advanced democracies. Our analysis differentiates between visits to general news domains and visits to politically relevant and Ukraine specific articles, with the latter identified using machine-learning techniques. We validate these exposure measures through multiple approaches, including their capacity to predict knowledge about the Russian invasion. Our findings underscore the importance of granularity. Visits to—and time spent on—Ukraine-related articles emerge as the only significant predictor of surveillance knowledge, whereas broader indicators, such as domain-level visits, show no significant effects once self-reported exposure and other key covariates are taken into account. We conclude by discussing the substantive and methodological implications of these findings.
Cardenal et al. (Wed,) studied this question.