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Examining the Role of YouTube Production and Consumption Dynamics on the Formation of Extreme Ideologies
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Examining the Role of YouTube Production and Consumption Dynamics on the Formation of Extreme Ideologies

Sarmad Chandio and Rishab Nithyanand
ArXiv.org
Cornell University
03/09/2026
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2603.08049
url
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2603.08049View
Preprint (Author's original)This preprint has not been evaluated by subject experts through peer review. Preprints may undergo extensive changes and/or become peer-reviewed journal articles. Open Access

Abstract

The relationship between content production and consumption on algorithm-driven platforms like YouTube plays a critical role in shaping ideological behaviors. While prior work has largely focused on user behavior and algorithmic recommendations, the interplay between what is produced and what gets consumed, and its role in ideological shifts remains understudied. In this paper, we present a longitudinal, mixed-methods analysis combining one year of YouTube watch history with two waves of ideological surveys from 1,100 U.S. participants. We identify users who exhibited significant shifts toward more extreme ideologies and compare their content consumption and the production patterns of YouTube channels they engaged with to ideologically stable users. Our findings show that users who became more extreme consumed have different consumption habits from those who do not. This gets amplified by the fact that channels favored by users with extreme ideologies also have a higher affinity to produce content with a higher anger, grievance and other such markers. Lastly, using time series analysis, we examine whether content producers are the primary drivers of consumption behavior or merely responding to user demand.
Computer Science - Computation and Language

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