On Politics and Pandemic: How Do Chilean Media Talk about Disinformation and Fake News in Their Social Networks?

被引:10
作者
Carcamo-Ulloa, Luis [1 ]
Cardenas-Neira, Camila [1 ]
Scheihing-Garcia, Eliana [2 ]
Saez-Trumper, Diego [3 ]
Vernier, Matthieu [2 ]
Blana-Romero, Carlos [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Austral Chile, Inst Social Commun, Isla Teja Campus, Valdivia 5110566, Chile
[2] Univ Austral Chile, Inst Informat, Valdivia 5110566, Chile
[3] Pompeu Fabra Univ, Dept Informat & Commun Technol, Barcelona 08002, Spain
关键词
disinformation; fake news; Chile; social media; news;
D O I
10.3390/soc13020025
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Citizens get informed, on a daily basis, from social networks in general and from the media in particular. Accordingly, the media are increasingly expressing their concern about phenomena related to disinformation. This article presents an analysis of the social networks of 159 Chilean media that, over 5 years, referred to fake news or disinformation on 10,699 occasions. Based on data science strategies, the Queltehue platform was programmed to systematically track the information posted by 159 media on their social networks (Instagram, Facebook and Twitter). The universe of data obtained (13 million news items) was filtered with a specific query to reach 10,699 relevant posts, which underwent textual computer analysis (LDA) complemented with manual strategies of multimodal discourse analysis (MDA). Among the findings, it is revealed that the recurrent themes over the years have mostly referred to fake news and politics and fake news related to health issues. This is widely explained on the grounds of a political period in Chile which involved at least five electoral processes, in addition to the global COVID-19 pandemic. Regarding the multimodal analysis, it is observed that when the dissemination of fake news involves well-known figures such as politicians or government authorities, an image or a video in which such figure appears is used. In these cases, two phenomena occur: (a) these figures have the opportunity to rectify their false or misinforming statements or (b) in most cases, their statements are reiterated and end up reinforcing the controversy. In view of these results, it seems necessary to ask whether this is all that can be done and whether this is enough that communication can do to guarantee healthy and democratic societies.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 43 条
[31]   Cross-SEAN: A cross-stitch semi-supervised neural attention model for COVID-19 fake news detection [J].
Paka, William Scott ;
Bansal, Rachit ;
Kaushik, Abhay ;
Sengupta, Shubhashis ;
Chakraborty, Tanmoy .
APPLIED SOFT COMPUTING, 2021, 107
[32]  
PINUEL J. L., 2013, CONFIAR PRENSA METOD
[33]  
Queltehue Platform, AD HOC INFR MON SOC
[34]   (Mis)Information Dissemination in WhatsApp: Gathering, Analyzing and Countermeasures [J].
Resende, Gustavo ;
Melo, Philipe ;
Sousa, Hugo ;
Messias, Johnnatan ;
Vasconcelos, Marisa ;
Almeida, Jussara M. ;
Benevenuto, Fabricio .
WEB CONFERENCE 2019: PROCEEDINGS OF THE WORLD WIDE WEB CONFERENCE (WWW 2019), 2019, :818-828
[35]   Filter Bubbles, Echo Chambers, and Fake News: How Social Media Conditions Individuals to Be Less Critical of Political Misinformation [J].
Rhodes, Samuel C. .
POLITICAL COMMUNICATION, 2022, 39 (01) :1-22
[36]   Are they bots? Social media automation during Chile's 2017 presidential campaign [J].
Santana, Luis E. ;
Huerta Canepa, Gonzalo .
CUADERNOS INFO, 2019, (44) :61-77
[37]   Fake News as a Critical Incident in Journalism [J].
Tandoc, Edson C., Jr. ;
Jenkins, Joy ;
Craft, Stephanie .
JOURNALISM PRACTICE, 2019, 13 (06) :673-689
[38]   DEFINING "FAKE NEWS" A typology of scholarly definitions [J].
Tandoc, Edson C., Jr. ;
Lim, Zheng Wei ;
Ling, Richard .
DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2018, 6 (02) :137-153
[39]   Echo chambers and viral misinformation: Modeling fake news as complex contagion [J].
Tornberg, Petter .
PLOS ONE, 2018, 13 (09)
[40]   You are fake news: political bias in perceptions of fake news [J].
van der Linden, Sander ;
Panagopoulos, Costas ;
Roozenbeek, Jon .
MEDIA CULTURE & SOCIETY, 2020, 42 (03) :460-470