{"id":"W3003483085","doi":"10.3386/w26669","title":"Cross-Country Trends in Affective Polarization","year":2020,"lang":"en","type":"report","venue":"National Bureau of Economic Research","topic":"Social Media and Politics","field":"Social Sciences","cited_by":375,"is_retracted":false,"has_abstract":true,"ca_institutions":"","funders":"Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research; Queen's University; York University; Army Research Office; John S. and James L. Knight Foundation; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Brown University; National Science Foundation","keywords":"Cross country; Polarization (electrochemistry); Psychology; Geography; Demographic economics; Economics; Chemistry","routes":{"ca_aff":false,"ca_fund":true,"ca_venue":false,"about_ca":false,"invisible_to_affiliation_only":true},"retraction":null,"screen":null,"machine_scores":{"provisional":true,"baseline":true,"maturity_gate_passed":false,"score_opus":0.3233900759212562,"score_gpt":0.5852385381102216,"score_spread":0.2618484621889655,"validation_status":"score_only:v0-immature-baseline","note":"Baseline scores from an immature model (maturity gate not passed). Scores rank; they never assert a category."}}