Literature suggests that while without doubt people engage in selective exposure to information, this does not entail that they also engage in selective avoidance of opinion-challenging information. However, cross-cutting exposure does not always lead to dispassionate deliberation. In this commentary I explore psychological conditions as they apply to attitude-based selection and make an argument that selectivity does not stop at exposure but continues as audiences engage with information they encounter and incorporate in their decision-making. I propose the theory of motivated reasoning as a rich theoretical underpinning that helps us understand selective exposure and selective information processing.
CITATION STYLE
Camaj, L. (2019, July 1). From selective exposure to selective information processing: A motivated reasoning approach. Media and Communication. Cogitatio Press. https://doi.org/10.17645/mac.v7i3.2289
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