Researchers mine Twitter to reveal Congress' ideological divide on climate change

Senate Democrats are three times more likely to follow science-related Twitter accounts than their Republican peers

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Does human activity drive global climate change? For members of Congress, the answer often depends on party affiliation. In general, Republicans say “nay,” Democrats “yea.”

A research team led by Brian Helmuthprofessor in the College of Science and the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairswants to change that.

In a new paper published Monday in the journal Climate Change Responses, Helmuth and his Northeastern colleagues analyzed the Twitter accounts of U.S. senators to see which legislators followed research-oriented science organizations, including those covering global warming. Democrats, they found, were three times more likely than Republicans to follow them, leading the researchers to note that “overt interest in science may now primarily be a ‘Democrat’ value.”

Yet out of that political polarization, says Helmuth, came a ray of hope: 15 Senate Republicans bridged the aisle, displaying a draw to science and thus a way to bring scientific information to those not receiving it on their own.

“Increasingly, people are using Facebook and Twitter as a means of getting news, which determines what information they are exposed to,” says Helmuth. A marine biologist and an ecologist, Helmuth investigates the effects of climate change on marine organisms, aiming to provide policymakers with scientifically accurate forecasts to inform their decisions.

“Our study tells us which organizations and senators we should work with to get science-related findings into the hands of people who otherwise might not see them,” says Helmuth.

Two distinct ‘echo chambers’

The study sprang from the researchers’ desire to make their forecasts more accessible to policymakers. The coauthors of the paper are Tarik Gouhier, assistant professor, and Steven Scyphers, associate research scientist, both in the Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences at Northeastern, and Jenn Mocarski, administrative assistant in the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs.

“We used to make forecasts using quantitative methods and then put them out in the world,” says Helmuth. “The shift now is: Let’s start by learning what information end users actually want. What matters to them, and what common ground can we find to communicate our science in an effective way?”

They turned to Twitter to unearth the legislators’ interests as well as the image each office projected to the public: Was a particular senator “pro science” or not? All told, they evaluated Twitter data from 89 senators49 Republicans, 38 Democrats, and two Independents. In the paper they include a list of the total number of Twitter accounts followed by each senator and the proportion of accounts categorized as “science.”

Using network analysis, they sifted through the nearly 79,000 Twitter accounts the senators followed and tracked how their science-related follows compared with their votes on amendments to the Keystone XL pipeline bill, including one regarding the role of human activity in causing climate change.

Not surprisingly, says Helmuth, the Republican and Democratic senators landed in two distinct “echo chambers.” The Republicans were, let’s say, in right field, bouncing the same select information back and forth, and the Democrats were in left field, bouncing their own select information back and forth.

“The bias was so great that the two parties were seeing completely different worlds,” says Helmuth. “That leaves no basis for dialogue. They weren’t looking at, for instance, a report with the Republicans saying, ‘I interpret this report this way based on my political leanings,’ and the Democrats saying, ‘Well, I interpret it this way.’ The divisions have gotten so great that identifying as being ‘pro science’ or not now looks as if it’s part of party identity.”

Seeking common ground

Yet there’s good news, too, notes Helmuth. The researchers found it by correlating the senators’ Twitter follows with their pipeline amendment votes. There are champions of science in both parties, says Helmuth, “people we identified who are willing to cross party lines and to get information from both ends of the spectrum.”

Helmuth suggests that scientists target these “crossovers,” as well as apolitical “boundary organizations,” which straddle the science-policy divide, to help get their messages across. Focusing the conversation on issues everyone cares about, such as national defense and human health, opens doors, too.

“The science of climate change is not politicalit’s based on objective facts,” says Helmuth. “It’s the solutions to climate change that are political. But you can’t force information down people’s throats, and oftentimes you can’t even influence positions with data. You need to concentrate on where people are starting fromthe stories that are relevant to them. Then you put what you’re trying to say in that context.”

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jarthuroriginal
June 3, 2016 6:36 am

I had to give up the Scientific American magazine because it had become political. It was a hundred times better as a source of scientific commentary than Twitter or Fakebook.
Who in their right mind would even think of using social media as a source of scientific thought?

Bruce Cobb
June 3, 2016 6:40 am

“We used to make forecasts using quantitative methods and then put them out in the world,” says Helmuth.

Translation: “We used to do actual science”, but it was boring, and no one was interested.
“The shift now is: Let’s start by learning what information end users actually want. What matters to them, and what common ground can we find to communicate our science in an effective way?”
Translation: “Whee! Social “science”. This is so much more fun. And people listen to us now. Who cares if it isn’t actual science!

John Harmsworth
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
June 3, 2016 7:07 pm

More like, ” then we can rewrite our papers to goose our funding “!

Rob Morrow
June 3, 2016 7:27 am

The lunatics are running the asylum up here in Canada. Prime minister Twerpdeau wants to change our voting system without giving the people a referendum and the Orwellian “minister of democratic institutions” believes twitter is a better way to gauge public sentiment than a real vote.

tadchem
June 3, 2016 7:33 am

The partisan divide is only approximate, and therefore misleading.
The actual boundary between warmists and skeptics is something called ‘critical thinking’, a process by which assertions are only provisionally considered until they can be TESTED against independent sources to determine their veracity.
Those who practice critical thinking are by definition skeptics, and are often suspicious of unproven government programs to fix what ails the people, environment, country, economy, etc. Since they are naturally cautious, they tend to be politically conservative as well, and thus are more comfortable as Republicans.

TA
Reply to  tadchem
June 3, 2016 2:34 pm

tadchem wrote: “Those who practice critical thinking are by definition skeptics, and are often suspicious of unproven government programs to fix what ails the people, environment, country, economy, etc. Since they are naturally cautious, they tend to be politically conservative as well, and thus are more comfortable as Republicans.”
I think that sums it up nicely.

Mike McMillan
June 3, 2016 7:58 am

This wouldn’t be the Helmuth who “speaks for Boskone” perchance?

Michael 2
Reply to  Mike McMillan
June 3, 2016 2:05 pm

Wow, there’s a blast from the past! Lensman, anyone? Back when spaceship navigation used slide rules.

John Robertson
June 3, 2016 9:08 am

The learned Helmuth would have looked even more stupid to his peers if he had reported;”Twits twitter.”
Old english a twit is a derogatory descriptor.
I shudder to imagine/endure the public policy that results from such a shallow understanding of science and human interests.
140 characters are excellent for slander and smear .
Not so great for defining your terms and laying out your hypothesis,with suggested ways to test it.
I wonder what science means in these universities?
An individual of authority?
Or a means of revealing the amazing world around us?

June 3, 2016 9:16 am

Yet another Warmist sociological study . I guess they count the size of their echo chambers as dispositive as physics so no need to hurt their brains with the hard sciences .

MikeH
June 3, 2016 9:41 am

So one could say “If you don;t watch the Daily Show, you are not interested in the news”. Many ‘people’ (I use quotes for a reason) get their ‘News’ from the Daily Show, on Comedy Central!!! Sure, he may be quick witted, but the topics go thru a group of writers and give things in the news a comedic spin. It’s comedy, not news.
To state that just because you don’t follow ‘scientific’ Twitter accounts, that you’re anti-science. How narrow minded is this person? WUWT has a Twitter account, did he include this as a science site?
Twitter can be a fun past time, but these people that put so much emphasis on Twitter gives me a headache. That why I call them Twits.

John Harmsworth
Reply to  MikeH
June 3, 2016 7:11 pm

Scientific twitter accounts is an oxymoron!

TA
June 3, 2016 2:02 pm

from the article: “All told, they evaluated Twitter data from 89 senators 49 Republicans, 38 Democrats, and two Independents.”
Correction: That is really 49 Republicans and 40 Democrats. The two “Independents” are not so independent.

TA
June 3, 2016 2:41 pm

The Alarmists just can’t understand why the Skeptics won’t go along with the CAGW program. Since the science is settled in their minds, they think the problem with the Skeptics is psychological, or ideological, or a communications problem.
When Skeptics say there is no evidence to support the CAGW theory, the Alarmists act like they can’t hear what the Skeptics are saying. They don’t hear, because if they did hear, then they would have to provide evidence, and they don’t have any to provide, so they change the subject to Twitter and other diversions.

Evan Jones
Editor
June 4, 2016 3:39 am

“overt interest in science may now primarily be a ‘Democrat’ value.”
Good Lord . . .

Not Oscar, just a grouch
June 5, 2016 3:12 am

“overt interest in science may now primarily be a ‘Democrat’ value.”
I really do hope that no one broke an arm trying to pat themselves on the back for being so “special.”