Warren Weeks - Cubit's Founder & CEO

The nature of media bias - a Cubit thought piece

by Warren Weeks - Cubit's Founder & CEO
in Media Content Analysis
1 Jan 2013  |  0 Comments

There has been quite a lot of talk about bias in the media recently, especially in regard to particular newspapers.  So, it seems appropriate to post a brief explanation of how media analysis techniques can objectively identify and report on certain types of bias, whenever and wherever they are encountered.

But before examining how analytical methods detect bias, it’s important to decide what we mean by the term ‘bias’ in this context.

One definition is:
To show prejudice for or against (someone or something) unfairly: "the tests were biased against women"; "a biased view of the world".

Another:
To show prejudice in favor of or against one thing, person, or group compared with another, usually in a way considered to be unfair. 

Note that inherent in both definitions of bias listed here is the presence of the somewhat allied notions of the absence of fairness and of prejudice

In other words, bias can be said to be present when an opinion or position is taken up without a fair examination and presentation of both sides of an argument, or where a judgment is made and a position expressed prior to the examination of the facts.

Based on these definitions, it is not enough for us to claim that a media organization is biased simply because it disagrees with our position. Rather, there needs to be evidence of unfairness or prejudice in what it publishes or broadcasts – and this includes the practice of presenting just one side of a story as though it were a fair and reasonable representation of both sides.

Fortunately identifying the elements of bias is not a particularly difficult task so long as one has: (a) the right data handling tools and (b) a set of proven analysis procedures to follow, and (c) quality control regimes capable of checking analysts’ objectivity.  Armed with these, bias can be detected though a fairly simple assessment of the nature and position of the messages that comprise a set of news articles, and through which all positions are put and arguments made.

There is one more thing to keep in mind however.  When it comes to an examination of media content, bias is a relative concept - and spotting and quantifying it is an exercise in comparative assessment rather than absolute determination.  So in order to make an assessment in respect of the presence or absence of bias in the media, an analyst needs to have access to a representative volume of material from multiple publishers and over a reasonable time frame.

Only then can any assessment be considered to be accurate and defensible.

Some of the message characteristics media analysts look for are:

  1. The selective omission of facts that are pertinent or critical to either side of an argument, but which are raised and presented elsewhere as a matter of course
  2. Inclusion of statements that are at odds with other sources and which could be said to be false or misleading
  3. The deliberate disadvantageous positioning of key facts – perhaps by hiding some valuable piece of information at the very end of an article
  4. Presenting personal opinion or hearsay as fact
  5. Deliberate substitution of emotive for factual arguments in order to obfuscate the matter under examination
  6. Demonization of those seeking to present another side of an argument rather than dealing with the points they raise.

Once any of these message characteristics are identified, validated and tabulated, it is a relatively straightforward affair to determine the extent, precise nature, and perpetrator of the bias.

 
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