What to Believe? Social Media Commentary and Belief in Misinformation

被引:1
|
作者
Nicolas M. Anspach
Taylor N. Carlson
机构
[1] York College of Pennsylvania,
[2] University of California,undefined
[3] San Diego,undefined
来源
Political Behavior | 2020年 / 42卷
关键词
Social media; Misinformation; Motivated reasoning; Opinion leadership; Political communication;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Americans are increasingly turning to social media for political information. However, given that the average social media user only clicks through on a small fraction of the political content available, the brief article previews that appear in the News Feed likely serve as shortcuts to political information. Yet, in addition to sharing political news, social media also allow users to make their own comments on news posts, comments which may challenge or distort the information contained in the articles. In this paper, we first analyze how social media posts on Twitter and Facebook differ from the actual content of their linked news articles, finding that social media comments regularly misrepresent the facts reported in the news. We then use a survey experiment to test the consequences of these information discrepancies. Specifically, we randomly assign individuals to read a full news article, a news article preview post (as seen on Facebook), or a news article preview with misinformative social commentary attached. We find that individuals in the social commentary conditions are more misinformed about the featured topic, tending to report the factually-incorrect information relayed in the comments rather than the factually-correct information embedded within the article preview.
引用
收藏
页码:697 / 718
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Health Misinformation in Search and Social Media
    Ghenai, Amira
    SIGIR'17: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 40TH INTERNATIONAL ACM SIGIR CONFERENCE ON RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT IN INFORMATION RETRIEVAL, 2017, : 1371 - 1371
  • [32] You believe what?!: Relational closeness and belief relevance predict conspiracy belief tolerance
    Bradley M. Okdie
    Daniel M. Rempala
    Sophia R. Mustric
    Current Psychology, 2023, 42 : 27630 - 27645
  • [33] Media Trust Under Threat: Antecedents and Consequences of Misinformation Perceptions on Social Media
    Stubenvoll, Marlis
    Heiss, Raffael
    Matthes, Joerg
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2021, 15 : 2765 - 2786
  • [34] South Korean Perceptions of Misinformation on Social Media: The Limits of a Consensus?
    Rich, Timothy S.
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN AND AFRICAN STUDIES, 2024, 59 (05) : 1446 - 1462
  • [35] Psychological interventions countering misinformation in social media: A scoping review
    Gwiazdzinski, Pawel
    Gundersen, Aleksander B.
    Piksa, Michal
    Krysinska, Izabela
    Kunst, Jonas R.
    Noworyta, Karolina
    Olejniuk, Agata
    Morzy, Mikolaj
    Rygula, Rafal
    Wojtowicz, Tomi
    Piasecki, Jan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 13
  • [36] Analysis of User Verification Behavior Towards Misinformation in Social Media
    Salman, Gulcin
    TURKIYE ILETISIM ARASTIRMALARI DERGISI-TURKISH REVIEW OF COMMUNICATION STUDIES, 2023, (44): : 148 - 168
  • [37] Using Expert Sources to Correct Health Misinformation in Social Media
    Vraga, Emily K.
    Bode, Leticia
    SCIENCE COMMUNICATION, 2017, 39 (05) : 621 - 645
  • [38] Intervention Strategies for Misinformation Sharing on Social Media: A Bibliometric Analysis
    Zainudin, Juanita
    Mohamad Ali, Nazlena
    Smeaton, Alan F.
    Taha Ijab, Mohamad
    IEEE ACCESS, 2024, 12 : 140359 - 140379
  • [39] E-Cigarette-Related Nicotine Misinformation on Social Media
    Sidani, Jaime E.
    Hoffman, Beth L.
    Colditz, Jason B.
    Melcher, Eleanna
    Taneja, Sanya Bathla
    Shensa, Ariel
    Primack, Brian
    Davis, Esa
    Chu, Kar-Hai
    SUBSTANCE USE & MISUSE, 2022, 57 (04) : 588 - 594
  • [40] Misinformation-Aware Social Media: A Software Engineering Perspective
    Almaliki, Malik
    IEEE ACCESS, 2019, 7 : 182451 - 182458