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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Fri Sep 28, 2012, 10:24 AM Sep 2012

Oh Boy: Browser Plugin Helps People Balance Their Political News Reading Habits

ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2012) — As the U.S. presidential election approaches, many voters become voracious consumers of online political news. A tool by a University of Washington researcher tracks whether all those articles really provide a balanced view of the debate -- and, if not, suggests some sites that offer opinions from the other side of the political spectrum.

Balancer (http://balancestudy.org/balancer/), a free plug-in for Google's Chrome browser, was developed this summer by Sean Munson, a new UW assistant professor of Human Centered Design and Engineering. The tool analyzes a person's online reading habits for a month and calculates the political bias in that behavior. It then suggests sites that represent a different point of view and continues to monitor reading behavior and offer feedback.

"I was a bit surprised when I was testing out the tool to learn just how slanted my own reading behavior was," Munson said. "Even self-discovery is a valuable outcome, just being aware of your own behavior. If you do agree that you should be reading the other side, or at least aware of the dialogue in each camp, you can use it as a goal: Can I be more balanced this week than I was last week?"

The tool classifies more than 10,000 news websites and sections of news websites on a spectrum ranging from far left to far right, using results of previous studies and existing media-bias indices. For a few popular sites the tool also tries to classify individual columnists whose views may be different from those of the overall publication's slant.

more
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/09/120927152141.htm

Ho about a truth vs fantasy 'balancer'?

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Oh Boy: Browser Plugin Helps People Balance Their Political News Reading Habits (Original Post) n2doc Sep 2012 OP
Science to help you rediscover hate and ignorance get the red out Sep 2012 #1
Who, or what criteria was used, to classify a website on the political scale? cleanhippie Sep 2012 #2

get the red out

(13,462 posts)
1. Science to help you rediscover hate and ignorance
Fri Sep 28, 2012, 10:36 AM
Sep 2012

Great! Just what we need! Let's just add to the pretense that Republicans have something other than lies to offer.

cleanhippie

(19,705 posts)
2. Who, or what criteria was used, to classify a website on the political scale?
Fri Sep 28, 2012, 10:58 AM
Sep 2012

Was MSNBC listed as "far-left", was Fox News listed as "fair and balanced"? Seems to me, that science probably had nothing to do with it, and the programmers bias is likely all over it.

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