top of page

What drives perceptions of the political in online advertising?: The source, content, and political orientation

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.

Read Abstract

Date Posted

September 10, 2025

Authors

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

Themes

Online Behavior, Public Opinion

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.

Date Posted

September 10, 2025

Authors

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

Themes

Online Behavior, Public Opinion

bottom of page