Cross-national evidence of a negativity bias in psychophysiological reactions to news

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019 Sep 17;116(38):18888-18892. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1908369116. Epub 2019 Sep 3.

Abstract

What accounts for the prevalence of negative news content? One answer may lie in the tendency for humans to react more strongly to negative than positive information. "Negativity biases" in human cognition and behavior are well documented, but existing research is based on small Anglo-American samples and stimuli that are only tangentially related to our political world. This work accordingly reports results from a 17-country, 6-continent experimental study examining psychophysiological reactions to real video news content. Results offer the most comprehensive cross-national demonstration of negativity biases to date, but they also serve to highlight considerable individual-level variation in responsiveness to news content. Insofar as our results make clear the pervasiveness of negativity biases on average, they help account for the tendency for audience-seeking news around the world to be predominantly negative. Insofar as our results highlight individual-level variation, however, they highlight the potential for more positive content, and suggest that there may be reason to reconsider the conventional journalistic wisdom that "if it bleeds, it leads."

Keywords: negativity bias; news coverage; political communication.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Attention / physiology
  • Bias
  • Humans
  • Mass Media / statistics & numerical data*
  • Negativism*
  • Politics
  • Psychophysiology