What campaigns actually do:
They prime issues.
Each side tries to make their issue feel most urgent.
Not to change your mindβbut to reframe your attention.
π§Ύ Shaki et al. (2024)
π arxiv.org/pdf/2412.1...
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Source:
Shaki et al. (2024)
A Game-Theoretic Model of Campaign Priming
arxiv.org/pdf/2412.1...
#VoteFocus3 #MediaLiteracy #IssueSalience #ForumThreads
So next time you wonder why everyone is talking about one thing, ask:
Who benefits if this issue dominates the election?
Whatβs not being talked about?
What am I being primed to care about right now?
Thatβs the core media literacy question.
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Why does this matter for disinfo awareness?
Because misinformation often works the same way:
β Not by fabricating facts
β But by shifting focus
β By making the wrong threat feel urgent
β Or the right issue feel irrelevant
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This fits what we see in real-world elections:
β One side leans into crime
β The other leans into inequality
Each hopes that their issue becomes the one voters use to decide.
Not by lyingβjust by focusing.
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Campaigns aren't about changing your mind.
Theyβre about getting you to care about the issue that helps their candidate win.
Thatβs not persuasionβitβs priming.
And itβs central to how campaigns work.
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π§΅ How Campaigns Shape AttentionβNot Belief
Based on: Shaki et al. (2024)
arxiv.org/pdf/2412.1...
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