Misinformation in social interaction: examining the role of discussion

被引:2
|
作者
Saraiva, Magda [1 ,3 ]
Garrido, Margarida Vaz [2 ]
机构
[1] Ispa Inst Univ, William James Ctr Res, Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Iscte Inst Univ Lisboa, Ctr Invest & Intervencao Social, Lisbon, Portugal
[3] Ispa Inst Univ, William James Ctr Res, Rua Jardim Tabaco 34, P-1149041 Lisbon, Portugal
关键词
Misinformation; free-for-all method; turn-taking-method; error-pruning; social interaction contexts; COLLABORATIVE INHIBITION; FALSE MEMORIES; WORD LISTS; RECALL; RETRIEVAL; CONTAGION;
D O I
10.1080/09658211.2023.2300671
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Memory is a reconstructive process that is prone to intrusions and distortions. These processes can be amplified by the emergence and propagation of false information in the social environment. While the acceptance of misinformation is well documented in individual memory tasks, the production of false memories in social interaction contexts presents mixed findings. One factor that may contribute to these inconsistencies is the collaboration method used, which may vary in the opportunities they offer for more (free-for-all) or less (turn-taking) discussion. The current study contrasts these two collaboration methods in misinformation acceptance. Participants watched a video, followed by an individual recall task. Then, they completed a questionnaire containing true and misinformation about the video, individually or in pairs (using free-for-all or turn-taking methods). Finally, participants were given a new individual recall task. Results revealed that participants responding to the questionnaire using the free-for-all method were more accurate and accepted less misinformation (vs. turn-taking and individual conditions). Critically, in the second individual recall, these participants also recalled less misinformation from the questionnaire than those in the turn-taking condition. These results suggest that discussion opportunities during social interaction enhance correction and error-pruning and reduce misinformation acceptance.
引用
收藏
页码:156 / 165
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Role of Narratorship and Expertise in Social Remembering
    Brown, Adam D.
    Coman, Alin
    Hirst, William
    SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 40 (03) : 119 - 129
  • [42] Information overload and misinformation sharing behaviour of social media users: Testing the moderating role of cognitive ability
    Apuke, Oberiri Destiny
    Omar, Bahiyah
    Tunca, Elif Asude
    Gever, Celestine Verlumun
    JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SCIENCE, 2024, 50 (06) : 1371 - 1381
  • [43] Combating Misinformation on Social Media Using Social Noise and Social Entropy as a Measure of Uncertainty
    Alsaid, Manar
    Parvathi Panguluri, Siva
    Hawamdeh, Suliman
    Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 2024, 61 (01) : 25 - 35
  • [44] From Eyewitness to Academic Contexts: Examining the Effect of Misinformation in First and Second Languages
    Smith, Kendra C.
    Multhaup, Kristi S.
    Ihejirika, Rivka C.
    APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 31 (05) : 546 - 557
  • [45] Pediatric Patients and Dietary Choices Examining alternative options, decision making, and misinformation
    Zanecosky, Rebecca
    CLINICAL JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY NURSING, 2020, 24 (03) : 290 - +
  • [46] The role of inhibitory control in the production of misinformation effects
    MacLeod, MD
    Saunders, J
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2005, 31 (05) : 964 - 979
  • [47] The role of libraries in misinformation programming: A research agenda
    Young, Jason C.
    Boyd, Brandyn
    Yefimova, Katya
    Wedlake, Stacey
    Coward, Chris
    Hapel, Rolf
    JOURNAL OF LIBRARIANSHIP AND INFORMATION SCIENCE, 2021, 53 (04) : 539 - 550
  • [48] Does Semantic Association Play a Role in Post-Event Misinformation Effect?
    Goz, Ilyas
    Tekin, Serra
    Dinn, Ayse Aycicegi
    TURK PSIKOLOJI DERGISI, 2015, 30 (75): : 36 - 46
  • [49] Bad social norms rather than bad believers: examining the role of social norms in bad beliefs
    Mueller, Basil
    SYNTHESE, 2024, 203 (02)
  • [50] The role of narcissism and motivated reasoning on misinformation propagation
    Haupt, Michael Robert
    Cuomo, Raphael
    Mackey, Tim K.
    Coulson, Seana
    FRONTIERS IN COMMUNICATION, 2024, 9