A Systematic Review of Echo Chamber Research: Comparative Analysis of Conceptualizations, Operationalizations, and Varying Outcomes
David Hartmann, Sonja Mei Wang, Lena Pohlmann, and Bettina Berendt

TL;DR
This systematic review analyzes 129 studies on echo chambers, highlighting measurement variations, regional biases, and the need for cross-platform and causal research to better understand their societal impact.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive taxonomy of echo chamber conceptualizations and operationalizations, identifying key biases and proposing future research directions.
Findings
Support for echo chamber hypothesis varies by measurement approach.
Regional and platform-specific biases influence research outcomes.
Content exposure studies often challenge the existence of echo chambers.
Abstract
This systematic review synthesizes research on echo chambers and filter bubbles to explore the reasons behind dissent regarding their existence, antecedents, and effects. It provides a taxonomy of conceptualizations and operationalizations, analyzing how measurement approaches and contextual factors influence outcomes. The review of 129 studies identifies variations in measurement approaches, as well as regional, political, cultural, and platform-specific biases, as key factors contributing to the lack of consensus. Studies based on homophily and computational social science methods often support the echo chamber hypothesis, while research on content exposure and broader media environments, such as surveys, tends to challenge it. Group behavior, cultural influences, instant messaging platforms, and short video platforms remain underexplored. The strong geographic focus on the United…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Communication and Perception · Social and Intergroup Psychology · Electromagnetic Fields and Biological Effects
