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Estimating the Ideology of Political YouTube Videos
Building on other recent work, we develop a method to estimate the ideologies of YouTube videos, an important subset of media, based on their accompanying text metadata.
Citation
Lai, Angela, Megan A. Brown, James Bisbee, Joshua A. Tucker, Jonathan Nagler, and Richard Bonneau. "Estimating the Ideology of Political YouTube Videos." Political Analysis, pp. 1–16 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1017/pan.2023.42
Date Posted
Feb 13, 2024
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Abstract
We present a method for estimating the ideology of political YouTube videos. As online media increasingly influences how people engage with politics, so does the importance of quantifying the ideology of such media for research. The subfield of estimating ideology as a latent variable has often focused on traditional actors such as legislators, while more recent work has used social media data to estimate the ideology of ordinary users, political elites, and media sources. We build on this work by developing a method to estimate the ideologies of YouTube videos, an important subset of media, based on their accompanying text metadata. First, we take Reddit posts linking to YouTube videos and use correspondence analysis to place those videos in an ideological space. We then train a text-based model with those estimated ideologies as training labels, enabling us to estimate the ideologies of videos not posted on Reddit. These predicted ideologies are then validated against human labels. Finally, we demonstrate the utility of this method by applying it to the watch histories of survey respondents with self-identified ideologies to evaluate the prevalence of echo chambers on YouTube. Our approach gives video-level scores based only on supplied text metadata, is scalable, and can be easily adjusted to account for changes in the ideological climate. This method could also be generalized to estimate the ideology of other items referenced or posted on Reddit.