Compartir
Título
Quality vs. populism in short-video political communication: a multimodal study of TikTok
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Political communication
Tik Tok
Populism
Ecuador
Clasificación UNESCO
5910.02 Medios de Comunicación de Masas
6308.02 Sociolingüística
5902.04 Política de Comunicaciones
1203.99 Otras
Fecha de publicación
2026-02-25
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Rodas-Coloma, A., Cabezas-González, M., Casillas-Martín, S., & Nevado-Batalla Moreno, P. (2026). Quality vs. populism in short-video political communication: A multimodal study of TikTok. Journalism and Media, 7(1), 46. https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia7010046
Resumen
[EN]The article examines how framing and actor identity structure attention in short-video
politics using a country-level corpus from Ecuador. It assembles 4612 public TikTok videos
from official accounts and politically salient hashtags, extracts multimodal text via automatic
speech recognition and on-screen OCR, and constructs two continuous indices: a
quality index (programmatic, efficacy-oriented content) and a populism index (antagonistic,
people-versus-elite cues). Engagement is modeled as a fractional response (binomial GLM
with logit link), with robustness checks using OLS on logit(ER) and Poisson counts with an
offset for log(plays + 1). Models include affect (positive sentiment and anger), hour/day
controls, and actor fixed effects (leader, creator, institution, party, and media). The indices
display construct validity: quality aligns with positive/joyful tone and populism with anger.
Net of controls, populism is positively and consistently associated with engagement across
estimators; quality is small and often null or negative. Effects are heterogeneous: leaders
gain under both frames, creators primarily under populism, and media modestly under
populism, while institutions face penalties under both, and parties show limited returns.
Monthly series reveal event-linked intensification of populism, and hashtag networks are
modular, mapping onto institutional, partisan, and creator ecosystems. A design analysis
identifies a non-populist pathway—benefit-first micro-explanations, concise captions, targeted
hashtags, and joyful/efficacy affect—that raises engagement without antagonism.
The study contributes a reproducible, open-source pipeline for survey-free, multimodal
framing measurement and clarifies how persona × frame interactions and meso-level
discursive structure jointly organize attention in short-video politics.
URI
ISSN
2673-5172
DOI
10.3390/journalmedia7010046
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
- EDUDIG. Artículos [65]
Fichier(s) constituant ce document
Tamaño:
2.375Mo
Formato:
Adobe PDF












