Jaime Settle is the Cornelia Brackenridge Talbot Professor of Government at William & Mary. She is the director of the Social Networks and Political Psychology Lab and co-director of the Social Science Research Methods Center. She has a joint appointment in the Data Science Program, where she has previously served as Associate Director.
Professor Settle is a scholar of American political behavior with expertise in the fields of political psychology and communication. Her research focuses on how political interactions—in both face-to-face and online contexts—affect the way individuals perceive conflict in their environment, evaluate other people, and engage within the political system. Her interest in democratic erosion is rooted in questions about the way that the public understands and communicates about threats to democracy, as influenced by elite and media agenda setting and framing. She leads DEC’s effort on coding subnational erosion events in the United States.
Settle has published dozens of peer-reviewed manuscripts or chapters, including several in venues such as Nature, Science, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Journal of Political Science, and the Journal of Politics. In 2018, her first book Frenemies: How Facebook Polarizes America was published by Cambridge University Press. The book has won the prestigious Philip E. Converse Award (best book published in previous 10 years from the Elections, Voting, and Public Opinion section) as well as the Doris Graber Award (best book published at least five years ago from the Political Communication section), in addition to recognition from the Experiments Section and Political Networks Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA). Her second book, What Goes Without Saying: Navigating Political Discussion in America, was co-authored with W&M alum Taylor Carlson (’14), and received a best book award from the Political Networks section of APSA. Her research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Knight Foundation, and Meta.