Resources
Most recent models are published on Huggingface
[Benchmark, GitHub] MBIB – the first Media Bias Identification Benchmark Task and Dataset Collection
[Dataset, Huggingface] Anno-lexical (Lexical bias)
[Dataset, GitHub] BABE – Bias Annotations By Experts
[Dataset, Paper] BAT – Bias And Twitter
[Scale/Questionnaire to measure bias perception] Do You Think It’s Biased? How To Ask For The Perception Of Media Bias (A set of tested questions to assess media bias perception to be used in any bias-related research)
[Dataset, Zenodo] MBIC -A Media Bias Annotation Dataset Including Annotator Characteristics
Publications
2020
Garz, Marcel; Sood, Gaurav; Stone, Daniel F.; Wallace, Justin
The supply of media slant across outlets and demand for slant within outlets: Evidence from US presidential campaign news Journal Article
In: European Journal of Political Economy, vol. 63, pp. 101877, 2020, ISSN: 0176-2680.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Horse race news, media bias, Media slant, Motivated beliefs, Polarization, Selective exposure
@article{GARZ2020101877,
title = {The supply of media slant across outlets and demand for slant within outlets: Evidence from US presidential campaign news},
author = {Marcel Garz and Gaurav Sood and Daniel F. Stone and Justin Wallace},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0176268020300252},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2020.101877},
issn = {0176-2680},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
journal = {European Journal of Political Economy},
volume = {63},
pages = {101877},
abstract = {We conduct across-outlet and within-outlet (and within-topic) analyses of “congenially” slanted news. We study “horse race” news (news on candidates' chances in an upcoming election) from six major online outlets for the 2012 and 2016 US presidential campaigns. We find robust evidence that horse race headlines were slanted congenially with respect to the preferences of the outlets' typical readers. However, evidence of congenial slant in the timing and frequency of horse race stories is weaker. We also find limited evidence of greater within-outlet demand for headlines most congenial to outlets' typical readers, and somewhat stronger evidence of greater demand for relatively uncongenial headlines. We discuss how various aspects of our results are consistent with each of the major mechanisms driving slant studied in the theoretical literature, and may help explain when each mechanism is more likely to come into play. In particular, readers may be more likely to click on uncongenial headlines due to inferring that these stories are particularly informative when they stand in contrast to an outlet's typically congenial slant.},
keywords = {Horse race news, media bias, Media slant, Motivated beliefs, Polarization, Selective exposure},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}