Showing posts with label mini-Tuesday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mini-Tuesday. Show all posts

06 March 2008

Language Describing Candidates Moves Negative then More Positive

By Glenn Fannick
Dow Jones Insight staff

The mainstream media's coverage of the U.S. presidential campaign has inched toward negativity during the past 2 1/2 weeks then swung back toward more positive language after mini-Tuesday.

This 2 1/2-week period started the week before Clinton appeared on Saturday Night Live, spoofing the media's lack of gumption in investigating Obama.

This mini analysis was arrived at by consulting the automated favorability analysis in Dow Jones Insight. The system considered 65,374 press documents and found 26,435 of them to contain either favorable or unfavorable language dominating in reference to a candidate.

Comparitively, across all coverage that was not neutral, we found:

  • Week 1: Feb 17. to Feb. 23, Obama's coverage was 24% to Clinton's 22% and McCain's 21%.

  • Week 2: Feb. 24 to Mar. 1, the one after SNL and before mini-Tuesday, coverage was overall more unfavorable, with Obama's positive coverage at 16%, Clinton's at 14% and McCain's at 13%.

  • Then this (partial) week, Mar. 2 to Mar. 6, including the coverage of the days right before the Ohio-Texas primaries and the immediate aftermath, we see more favorable language emerging. Clinton and Obama were evenly getting 21% favorable language with McCain and his nomination-clinching week moving past them to 24%.



    Methodology: This analysis is of English-language documents only and was generated by software-based analysis which has been shown to be 80% accurate in similar corpora. Favorable and unfavorable ratings are assigned based on the words found in close proximity to a candidate's name. All neutral documents were excluded. The remaining 26,435 documents are those with discernible favorability. The source set excludes social media and press releases and includes global English language newspapers, magazines, broadcast transcripts and newswires.

04 March 2008

NAFTA Pops as 'New' Thing to Discuss on Campaign Trail

By Glenn Fannick
Dow Jones Insight staff


As mini-Tuesday approached there wasn't too much new that was being discussed on the campaign trail. But two concepts seemed to poke their heads above the rest of the noise -- NAFTA and religion. Looking to Dow Jones Insight's discovery technology that finds and counts previously untracked terms, we see today that "NAFTA" and related terms ("Canadian officials", etc.) far and away were the latest issue to gain some traction.

Religion (or, perhaps more accurately, fear-mongering discussions around it) also emerged with discussion around Barack Obama's middle name ("Hussein") and talk of support from Louis Farrakhan, seemingly moving the discussion.



Methodology: The total number of documents analyzed equals 2,946 on March 3, 2008. The number of mentions exceeds the number of documents as many documents include more than one mention of a candidate's name. Sources in this analysis include more than 6,000 newspapers, wires, magazines, radio and TV transcripts; more than 13,000 current-awareness news Web sites; 2 million of the most influential blogs; and more than 6,000 message boards.