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Dear all,

(With apologies for cross-posting.) Please join us on *October 2nd at 12 pm
on the 11th floor of 177 Huntington Ave.* for a talk by Jaime Settle of the
College of William & Mary: “Frenemies: How Social Media Polarizes America.”
Jaime Settle is a scholar of American political behavior, political
psychology, and communication. She employs an interdisciplinary approach to
reveal how social media has fostered partisan animosity.

This event is part of the Misinformation Speaker Series and is co-sponsored
with the Harvard Kennedy School Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and
Public Policy <https://shorensteincenter.org/> and Northeastern
University's Department of Political Science
<https://cssh.northeastern.edu/polisci/>.

The event details are below—please see the event page and attached flyer
for full details: https://web.northeastern.edu/nulab/event/jaime-settle/.

*Abstract:*
Why do Americans have such animosity for people who identify with the
opposing political party? In this book, the author argues that in the
context of increasing partisan polarization among American political
elites, the way we communicate on Facebook uniquely facilitates
psychological polarization among the American public. *Frenemies *introduces
the END Framework of social media interaction. END refers to a subset of
content that circulates in a social media ecosystem: a personalized,
quantified blend of politically informative expression, news, and
discussion seamlessly interwoven into a wider variety of socially
informative content. Scrolling through the News Feed triggers a cascade of
processes that result in negative attitudes about those who disagree with
us politically. The inherent features of Facebook, paired with the norms of
how people use the site, heighten awareness of political identity, bias the
inferences people make about others’ political views, and foster
stereotyped evaluations of the political out-group.

*Biography*:

*Jaime Settle is the David and Carolyn Wakefield Term Associate Professor
of Government at the College of William & Mary. She is a scholar of
American political behavior with expertise in the fields of political
psychology and communication. Settle’s research focuses on how political
interactions—in both face-to-face and online contexts—affect the way
individuals perceive conflict in their environment, evaluate other people,
and engage within the political system. She integrates tools from other
disciplines—such as behavior genetics, psychophysiology, and data
science—to inform our approach in understanding key questions within
political science. Settle has published 20 peer-reviewed manuscripts or
chapters in venues such as Nature, the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, the American Journal of Political Science, and the Journal of
Politics. In 2018, her first book Frenemies: How Facebook Polarizes America
was published by Cambridge University Press and won a best book award from
the Experiments in Politics section and an honorable mention from the
Political Networks section of the American Political Science Association.
She serves on the board of the American National Election Study and is an
associate editor at the Journal of Experimental Political Science. Settle
received her B.A. in Political Science from the University of Richmond and
her Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of California at San
Diego. She is the director of the Social Networks and Political Psychology
Lab and co-director of the Social Science Research Methods Center.*
This event is free and open to the public, but if you are not a member of
the Northeastern community, please email Sarah Connell,
[log in to unmask], to register.

Lastly, please take a moment and share this information with anyone who may
be interested.

Kind regards,

Laura Johnson
NULab Coordinator

-- 
*Laura Johnson (she/her)*
Ph.D. Student, English
Coordinator, NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks
Northeastern University

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