麻豆视频

Source credibility is key to derailing fake news

Fake news is a threat to American democratic institutions, whether through online election interference or, in extreme cases, inciting violence. It also can destroy a person鈥檚 reputation and career. Social media companies are spending huge amounts of money to combat the problem but with little success.

New research published April 30 in Proceedings of the National Academy of 麻豆视频 offers a roadmap for dealing with false information. In 鈥,鈥 a team led by Cornell psychology professor  provides new evidence that people鈥檚 beliefs about the source of information affects how they take in that information, even at the level of their automatic responses.

They also found that new information can modify or even undo existing impressions created by fake news.

鈥淲e wanted to know whether offering information about the source of news matters for people鈥檚 gut-level, automatic reactions. Does knowing that something is fake have lingering pernicious effects that can later shape and influence our thoughts and behavior toward the person? Our studies suggest that establishing credibility for news sources is the right policy to combat fake news,鈥 said Ferguson, one of the paper鈥檚 authors and senior associate dean for social sciences in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频.

Ferguson and fellow researchers Jeremy Cone, Ph.D. 鈥12, of Williams College, and Kathryn Flaharty of Georgetown University conducted seven experiments with more than 3,100 participants to assess how the truth value of new information about others affected both their reported feelings and their gut-level, automatic reactions. The experiments ranged from those using video games and narratives of intergroup conflicts to studies featuring an individual named Kevin.

The researchers used the character of Kevin to assess how attitudes toward him changed depending on what information was provided. In one series of experiments, Kevin was first depicted entirely positively. Then participants were told something disturbing 鈥 in one version of the experiment, that he had been arrested for domestic abuse of his ex-wife. The researchers found that when the news about the arrest record was attributed to police records, participants鈥 rapid, gut-level attitudes toward Kevin immediately became more negative.

But when the same information was attributed to a friend of Kevin鈥檚 ex-girlfriend 鈥 more questionably reliable than the police 鈥 participants retained their positive attitude toward Kevin. They saw the ex-girlfriend as perhaps having a reason to spread malicious, untrue gossip and, by discounting the source, discounted the information.

鈥淚n other words, whether participants thought this new information was true determined even their automatic feelings,鈥 the researchers wrote. 鈥淎nd, in a separate experiment, this occurred even if participants initially thought the information was true and only later discovered that it was from a questionable source.鈥

In another set of experiments using celebrities as the subject, the researchers found that even a single exposure to false news shifted participants鈥 automatic reactions to the negative from their previous positive attitude. However, the researchers found if they immediately informed participants that the news was fake, participants鈥 reactions did not switch to negative. The negative effects of the fake news could be undone simply by the researchers 鈥 who were seen as reliable sources of news 鈥 telling the participants that the news was false.

鈥淭he very same new information about an individual or event may or may not lead to substantive correction depending on the perceived credibility of the source 鈥 perceptions that are likely to differ markedly among people,鈥 the researchers wrote. 鈥淧erhaps, then, the philosopher [Gloria] Origgi is correct when she suggests that we live not in an 鈥榓ge of information鈥 but rather in an 鈥榓ge of reputation鈥 in which the most impactful information is that which is shared by the most reputable among us 鈥 not just for deliberate evaluations, but also for relatively more unintentional ones.鈥

More News from A&S

 woman on couch holding up newspaper with giant headline that says "Fake News"