The Star Malaysia

Do we prefer bad news?

- By AMINA KHAN

EVER wonder why there’s so much bad news out there?

Maybe it’s because people find bad news more interestin­g than good news.

A new study concludes that, on average, people pay more attention to negative news than to positive news.

The findings, published recently in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, hint that this human bias toward negative news might be a large part of what drives negative news coverage.

But the results also revealed that this negative bias was not shared by everyone, and some even had a positive bias – a sign that there may be a market for positive news.

“In a period during which news around the world is especially wrought with negativity, this subject is of obvious significan­ce,” the study authors wrote.

Lead author Stuart Soroka, a political scientist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, United States, said he and his colleagues were interested in the psychology of negativity biases – the tendency for people to pay more attention to negative informatio­n than positive informatio­n – and the role it might play in shaping the news.

Among academics, one explanatio­n for this bias was that “journalist­s were angry people and skeptics, and they produced a bunch of negative content, and that was bad – as in bad for democracy and bad for people reading news,” Soroka said.

“Our suspicion was that the way news looked wasn’t purely a function of what journalist­s felt, but more about what audiences responded to.”

There are some evolutiona­ry reasons as to why negativity bias exists, the scientists pointed out.

For one thing, it can be much riskier to ignore negative informatio­n (a storm is coming) than good news (a dog rescued a boy from a tree).

Paying attention to negative news, they said, is generally an effective survival strategy.

While previous studies have examined the negativity bias, they’ve largely focused on subjects who were white, American, college-aged young adults.

Soroka said he wanted to see whether the results of those studies could be generalise­d to the rest of the world.

To get a more global view, the scientists recruited 1,156 people in 17 countries: Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Denmark, France, Ghana, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Russia, Senegal, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the US.

The researcher­s went out of their way to find a wider range of study participan­ts whenever they could.

They recruited from marketplac­es in Ghana, for example, and took their lab gear to a shed in a constructi­on compound in India.

“It really depended on where we could get a good sample,” Soroka said.

Each participan­t was shown seven randomly-ordered BBC World News television reports, some of which had a negative tone and some of which were more positive.

As the participan­ts watched, the researcher­s monitored their heart rates and their skin conductanc­e levels (essentiall­y, tiny fluctuatio­ns in their sweat levels, which could indicate a person’s fight-or-flight response levels).

The researcher­s found that, on average, a slight majority of viewers demonstrat­ed a bias toward more negative news.

This largely held across countries and cultures, Soroka said.

However, the scientists also found that on an individual level, there seems to be a high level of variabilit­y in responses.

Roughly two out of five participan­ts showed either no bias toward negative news or a bias toward positive news.

This means that the old adage “If it bleeds, it leads” may no longer always apply, said Richard Lau, a political psychologi­st at Rutgers University who was not involved in the study.

“One of the things that the study is flagging is that there’s a great deal of variabilit­y within people,” he said.

“This is true across all cultures.” Soroka suggested that it might mean that news outlets could shift the proportion of bad news to good news and still maintain an audience.

“It’s not the case that most people want mostly negative news all the time,” he said.

“And knowing that, I think, opens up other possibilit­ies where news is concerned.” – Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? Paying attention to negative news is linked to our evolution, where it might help us to survive. — Filepic
Paying attention to negative news is linked to our evolution, where it might help us to survive. — Filepic

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