Online political engagement, cognitive skills and engagement with misinformation: evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa and the United States

Saifuddin Ahmed, Dani Madrid-Morales, M. Tully
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

PurposeInformational use of social media facilitates political engagement. Yet, there is also evidence of the perils of frequent political engagement in misinformation propagation. This study aims to examine the association between online political engagement, perceived exposure to misinformation, individuals’ cognitive characteristics and misinformation sharing.Design/methodology/approachIn this paper, online surveys were conducted in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa (Study 1) and the United States (Study 2).FindingsStudy 1 finds that online political engagement is positively associated with perceived exposure to and sharing of misinformation. Mediation analyses suggest that the relationship between online political engagement and misinformation sharing is mediated by perceived exposure to misinformation. Further, the likelihood of sharing misinformation is found to increase at higher levels of online political engagement, but those with low need for cognition (NFC) are more vulnerable to such sharing. Study 2 explores cognitive ability in place of NFC. The results follow similar patterns as Study 1 – online political engagement is linked to misinformation sharing via higher perceived exposure to misinformation. The authors also find that the tendency to share misinformation increases with frequent exposure to misinformation but those with lower cognitive ability are more prone to such sharing.Originality/valueIn both contexts, the data show that perceived exposure to misinformation mediates the relationship between online political engagement and misinformation sharing and those with low NFC and cognitive ability are more vulnerable. Overall, the findings offer insight into the mechanisms of political engagement and sharing misinformation.
网络政治参与、认知技能和对错误信息的参与:来自撒哈拉以南非洲和美国的证据
目的社交媒体的信息使用促进了政治参与。然而,也有证据表明,频繁参与错误信息传播的政治活动是危险的。本研究旨在探讨网络政治参与、错误信息感知暴露、个人认知特征与错误信息分享之间的关系。设计/方法/方法在本文中,在肯尼亚、尼日利亚和南非(研究1)以及美国(研究2)进行了在线调查。研究结果研究1发现,在线政治参与与感知到的错误信息暴露和分享呈正相关。中介分析表明,网络政治参与和错误信息分享之间的关系是由感知到的错误信息暴露介导的。此外,研究发现,分享错误信息的可能性随着在线政治参与程度的提高而增加,但那些认知需求(NFC)较低的人更容易受到这种分享的影响。研究2探讨了代替NFC的认知能力。结果与研究1相似——在线政治参与与错误信息分享有关,通过更高的错误信息感知曝光。作者还发现,分享错误信息的倾向随着频繁接触错误信息而增加,但认知能力较低的人更倾向于这种分享。在这两种情况下,数据显示,感知到的错误信息暴露介导了在线政治参与和错误信息分享之间的关系,而那些NFC和认知能力较低的人更容易受到影响。总的来说,这些发现为政治参与和分享错误信息的机制提供了见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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