Submitted:
13 February 2026
Posted:
14 February 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Methodological Approach
3. Theoretical Foundations: Gatekeeping and Agenda-Setting Theories in the Pre-Digital Era
3.1. The Gatekeeping Tradition
| Period | Scholar(s) | Key Contribution | Analytical Focus |
| 1947 | Lewin | Channel-and-gate metaphor for information flow | Conceptual foundation |
| 1950 | White | Application to news selection (“Mr. Gates” case study) | Individual gatekeeper |
| 1991 | Shoemaker | Multi-level model of gatekeeping influences | Individual, routine, organizational, extra-media, ideological |
| 2008 | Barzilai-Nahon | Network Gatekeeping Theory | Network position; gatekeeper–gated relations |
| 2009 | Shoemaker & Vos | Audience gatekeeping; updated multilevel theory | Audience as active gatekeepers |
| 2014 | Singer | Secondary gatekeeping in shared media spaces | User-generated visibility |
| 2018 | Bruns | Gate watching and news curation | Participatory observation and redistribution |
| 2018 | Bucher | Algorithmic power and programmed sociality | Computational/algorithmic gatekeeping |
3.2. The Agenda-Setting Tradition
| Level | Core Concept | Key Scholars | Mechanism |
| First level | Object salience transfer | McCombs and Shaw (1972) | Media emphasis on issues → public perception of issue importance |
| Second level | Attribute salience transfer | McCombs and Shaw (1993) | Media emphasis on attributes → public perception of attribute importance |
| Third level (NAS) | Network agenda setting | Guo and McCombs (2016); Vargo and Guo (2017) | Media construction of associative issue–attribute networks → public cognitive networks |
3.3. Points of Pre-Digital Convergence
4. The Digital Media Landscape: Key Transformations (2000–2025)
4.1. From Institutional to Algorithmic Mediation
| Phase | Period | Defining Features | Predominant Gatekeeping Mode | Predominant Agenda-Setting Mode |
| Phase 1 | 2000–2008 | Digitization of legacy media; emergence of blogs and early social platforms | Primarily institutional, with emergent participatory elements | Predominantly unidirectional; legacy media dominant |
| Phase 2 | 2008–2016 | Ascendancy of social media; mobile internet proliferation; algorithmic news feeds | Migration from editorial to algorithmic selection; hybrid models | Reciprocal inter-media influence; platform-mediated salience |
| Phase 3 | 2016–2025 | Platform scrutiny; regulatory responses (DSA, AI Act); AI-driven curation | Algorithmic dominance with platform governance overlay | Fragmented micro-agendas; personalized salience hierarchies |
4.2. Hybrid Media Dynamics and the Dissolution of Categorical Boundaries
4.3. Platform Governance as Structural Gatekeeping
5. Empirical Analysis and Contemporary Data Synthesis (2000–2025)
5.1. Comparative Trends in Information Filtering Across Platform Architectures
| Platform Type | Primary Gatekeeping Mechanism | Filtering Logic | Salience Criteria | Illustrative Example |
| Legacy media (print/broadcast) | Editorial selection by professional journalists | Professional news values (newsworthiness) | Timeliness, impact, proximity, prominence | Newspaper front-page placement |
| Social media (Meta, X) | Content moderation + algorithmic ranking | Community standards + engagement optimization | Engagement signals, policy compliance | Facebook News Feed algorithm |
| Video platforms (YouTube, TikTok) | Recommendation engine | Behavioral prediction + personalization | Watch time, individual relevance, retention | TikTok “For You” page |
| Collaborative platforms (Wikipedia) | Community editing + consensus processes | Verifiability, notability, neutral point of view | Collective editorial judgement | Wikipedia article prominence and deletion policy |
| Search engines (Google) | Algorithmic indexing + ranking | Relevance scoring, authority signals | PageRank, content freshness, user signals | Google Search results ordering |
5.2. Algorithmic Bias, Salience Distortion, and Democratic Cognition
| Source | Context | Key Finding | Implication for Salience |
| Guess et al. (2020) | 2016 US presidential election | Exposure to untrustworthy websites was concentrated among older, ideologically extreme users | Algorithmic exposure creates demographically stratified salience hierarchies |
| Bender et al. (2021) | Large language model deployment | LLMs amplify biases embedded in training data, including racial and gender biases | AI-mediated curation systematically reproduces inequitable visibility patterns |
| Benkler et al. (2018) | US political media ecosystem | Asymmetric polarization in media consumption driven by platform and network dynamics | Structural asymmetries in salience conferral across political orientations |
| Starbird et al. (2019) | Mass shooting events | Alternative media ecosystems produce coordinated counter-narratives through participatory disinformation | Strategic actors exploit algorithmic amplification for agenda manipulation |
| Cushion and Thomas (2018) | UK election coverage | Media ownership structures and platform logics shape candidate attribute visibility | Commercial and ownership interests distort political salience hierarchies |
5.3. Citizen Journalism, Decentralized Networks, and Counter-Hegemonic Agenda-Setting
6. Synthesizing Gatekeeping and Agenda-Setting Theories in the Algorithmic Ecosystem
6.1. The Convergence Thesis
6.2. Salience Agency: An Integrative Framework
| Dimension | Description | Guiding Analytical Question |
| Agent identity | Human individual, institutional actor, or algorithmic system | Who or what exercises influence information visibility? |
| Mechanism of influence | Editorial selection, algorithmic ranking, social sharing, regulatory intervention | Through what process is visibility determined? |
| Scale of effect | Individual, community, national, global | At what level does the salience effect operate? |
| Degree of transparency | Fully transparent, partially opaque, entirely opaque | To what extent are the criteria of visibility accessible to external scrutiny? |
| Normative orientation | Public interest, commercial engagement, political control, community consensus | What values or objectives guide the exercise of salience agency? |
6.3. Recursive Dynamics: The Salience Loop
| Feature | Classical Model | Algorithmic Model |
| Gate structure | Discrete decision points (admit/reject) | Continuous probabilistic visibility scoring |
| Gatekeeper identity | Identifiable human agents (editors, producers) | Opaque computational systems and platform policies |
| Audience conception | Mass public with broadly shared exposure | Fragmented micro-publics with personalized exposure |
| Information flow direction | Linear, predominantly unidirectional | Recursive, self-reinforcing (salience loop) |
| Temporal dynamics | News cycles measured in days or weeks | Real-time, continuous algorithmic updating |
| Feedback mechanism | Indirect and delayed (ratings, circulation, letters) | Direct and instantaneous (engagement data, behavioral signals) |
| Accountability framework | Professional norms, editorial codes of ethics | Terms of service, algorithmic design choices, regulatory instruments |
| Agenda formation | Unified media agenda transferred to public agenda | Multiple platform-specific, personalized micro-agendas |
7. Discussion: Implications for Theory, Practice, and Policy
7.1. Theoretical Implications
7.2. Implications for Media Management and Professional Practice
7.3. Policy and Regulatory Implications
8. Conclusion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Transparency
Conflicts of Interest
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