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this hypothesized influence of mass communication, ‘agenda setting’.10

      Testing this agenda-setting hypothesis required the comparison of two sets of evidence: a description of the public agenda, the set of issues that were of the greatest concern to Chapel Hill voters; and a description of the issue agenda in the news media used by those voters. Illustrated in Box 1.1, a central assertion of agenda-setting theory is that those aspects emphasized in the news come to be regarded by the public over time as being important. In other words, the media agenda sets the public agenda. Contrary to the Law of Minimal Consequences, this is a statement about a strong causal media effect on the public – the transfer of salience from the media agenda to the public agenda.

      

      In the survey, these undecided voters were asked to name the key issues of the day as they saw matters, regardless of what the candidates might be saying. The issues named in the survey were ranked according to the percentage of voters naming each one to yield a description of the public agenda. Note that this rank ordering of the issues is considerably more precise than simply grouping sets of issues into those receiving high, moderate, or low attention among the public.

      The nine major news sources used by these voters were also content analysed. This included five local and national newspapers, two television networks and two news magazines. The rank order of issues on the media agenda was determined by the number of news stories devoted to each issue in recent weeks. Although this was not the very first time that survey research had been combined with content analysis to assess the effects of specific media content, their tandem use to measure the effects of mass communication was rare at that time.

      Five issues dominated the media and public agendas during the 1968 US presidential campaign – foreign policy, law and order, economics, public welfare, and civil rights. There was a near-perfect correspondence between the rankings of these issues by the Chapel Hill voters, and their rankings based on their play in the news media during the previous twenty-five days. The salience of five key campaign issues among these undecided voters was virtually identical to the salience of these issues in the news coverage of recent weeks.

      In contrast, the concept of selectivity locates the central influence within the individual and stratifies media content according to its compatibility with an individual’s pre-existing attitudes and opinions. From this perspective, it is often assumed that the news media do little to alter the issue priorities of individuals because individuals maximize their exposure to supportive information and seek out news about issues that they already deem important. For instance, during an election, voters are expected to pay the most attention to those issues emphasized by their preferred political party.

      Which does the public agenda more closely reflect? The total agenda of issues in the news, which is the outcome hypothesized by agenda-setting theory? Or the agenda of issues advanced by a voter’s preferred party, which is the outcome hypothesized by the theory of selective perception?

      To answer these questions, those undecided Chapel Hill voters who had a preference (albeit not yet a firm commitment to vote for a candidate) were separated into three groups – Democrats, Republicans, and supporters of George Wallace, a third-party candidate in that election. For each of these three groups of voters, a pair of comparisons was made with the news coverage on the CBS television network: the issue agenda of that voter group compared with all the news coverage on CBS, and the issue agenda of the group compared with only the news on CBS originating with the group’s preferred party and candidate. These pairs of comparisons for CBS were repeated for NBC, the New York Times, and a local daily newspaper. In sum, there were a dozen pairs of correlations to compare: three groups of voters times four news media.

      Which was the stronger correlation in each pair? The agenda-setting correlation comparing voters with all the news coverage, or the selective perception correlation comparing voters with only the news of their preferred party and candidate? Eight of the twelve comparisons favoured the agenda-setting hypothesis. There was no difference in one case, and only three comparisons favoured the selective perception hypothesis. A new perspective on powerful media effects had established a foothold.

      

      To extend the evidence for agenda setting beyond the narrow focus on undecided voters in Chapel Hill and their media sources during the autumn 1968 election, a representative

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