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What Drives Perceptions of the Political in Online Advertising?: The Source, Content, and Political Orientation

Author

Listed:
  • Edelson, Laura
  • Lockett, Dominique
  • Guillard, Celia
  • Lauinger, Tobias
  • Li, Zhaozhi
  • Montgomery, Jacob M.
  • McCoy, Damon

Abstract

As digital platforms become a key channel for political advertising, there are continued calls for expanding regulation of digital political ads as a distinct content category. However, designing policies to meet these demands requires us first to decipher what the public perceives a “political” ad to be. In this article, we report two preregistered experiments to understand factors that drive public perceptions of what makes an ad political. We find that both advertiser-level cues and content-level cues play an independent role in shaping perceptions. To a lesser extent, participants also attribute political meaning to ads that clash with their own preferences. These patterns were replicated in a conjoint study using artificial ads and in an experiment using real-world ads drawn from the Facebook Ad Library. Our findings serve as an important benchmark for evaluating proposed definitions of political ads from policymakers and platforms.

Suggested Citation

  • Edelson, Laura & Lockett, Dominique & Guillard, Celia & Lauinger, Tobias & Li, Zhaozhi & Montgomery, Jacob M. & McCoy, Damon, 2026. "What Drives Perceptions of the Political in Online Advertising?: The Source, Content, and Political Orientation," Journal of Experimental Political Science, Cambridge University Press, vol. 13(1), pages 36-50, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:jexpos:v:13:y:2026:i:1:p:36-50_3
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