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Settle's research featured in Nature

Jaime Settle
Jaime Settle Research conducted in part by the assistant professor of government is featured in the cover story for the latest issue of the journal Nature. Courtesy photo

Research by Assistant Professor of Government Jaime Settle is featured this month in the cover story for the journal Nature. The article was published Sept. 13.

The research focuses on the influence of online social networks on behavior. Specifically, Settle and her colleagues conducted an experiment with 61 million Facebook users, 18 or older, looking at the impact messages sent via the site had on voting behavior during the 2010 Congressional election. The results were clear.

Nature cover“The results show that the messages directly influenced political self-expression, information seeking and real-world voting behavior of millions of people. Furthermore, the messages not only influenced the users who received them but also the users’ friends, and friends of friends,” Settle and her colleagues wrote.

During the experiment users were randomly selected for one of three groups -- an informational message group that received a message reminding them that it was Election Day and asking if they had voted; a social message group that received the same message as the first, but it also included a list and up to six pictures of the user’s friends who had voted; and a third group that received no message at all.

Settle, who came to William & Mary this fall, conducted the research while a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). She was part of a research team led by James Fowler, professor of medical genetics and political science. The team also included UC San Diego political scientists Robert M. Bond and Christopher J. Fariss, UC San Diego psychologist Jason J. Jones and Adam D. I. Kramer and Cameron Marlow from Facebook.

In a democratic system where one vote can change the outcome of an election, any degree of influence on that vote is significant, the team noted.

“While the effects of the mobilization message on any one individual were small, the magnitude of the effect given its spread through the social network is powerful. Close friends are especially influential, and political mobilization harnessing the power of social influence has great potential.”

The study’s findings were also featured in the New York Times, the Washington Post and CNN.

Settle says she will continue the research at William & Mary.

“I’m looking forward to continuing my work with my colleagues at UC San Diego and at Facebook, and working with students at William & Mary to further develop our knowledge of the connections between the online and offline worlds. Students of this generation – for good reason – are profoundly interested in studying the effects of social media and social networks on real world behavior.”

Settle’s other research interests are centered in the study of American politics, focusing primarily on political psychology and the biological components of political behavior. At William & Mary she will teach courses on topics related to political behavior and psychology. 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, San Diego.