ONE Believing Things That Are Not True: A Cognitive Science Perspective on Misinformation

E. Marsh, B. W. Yang
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

One of these rather silly anecdotes is an actual news story: some newer Canadian hundreddollar bills smell like maple syrup; England is considering issuing a coin featuring the pop band One Direction; the U.S. Treasury recently introduced Perry the Pyramid, a terrifying oneeyed mascot for the dollar. Choosing the real story was the task of a college student who called into the “Bluff the Listener” game on the National Public Radio program Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! (Danforth, 2013). He won the game by correctly selecting the true but rather obscure story about scented Canadian currency. How did the listener make this choice, given it was unlikely he had the relevant information in mind to make that decision? In this chapter, we review cognitive strategies and heuristics people use when deciding whether something is true. Our approach to understanding this issue is an experimental one, with the goal of isolating particular mechanisms that contribute to illusions of truth and the propagation of falsehoods. Many of the misconceptions covered in this volume are powerful precisely because they result from combinations of mental processes; there is not one simple trick to convincing people that Barack Obama was not born in the United States, that climate change is a hoax, or that other claims percolating through mass media are unsupported. Here, we consider how statements can be manipulated to seem more truthful than they are, why people unwittingly trust information from sources they initially knew to be unreliable, and how certain features of claims Believing Things That Are not True: A Cognitive science Perspective on Misinformation
一个人相信不真实的事情:错误信息的认知科学视角
其中一个相当愚蠢的轶事是一个真实的新闻故事:一些新的加拿大百元钞票闻起来像枫糖浆;英国正在考虑发行流行乐队单向乐队(One Direction)的硬币;美国财政部最近推出了“金字塔佩里”,这是一个可怕的独眼美元吉祥物。选择真实的故事是一名大学生的任务,他在国家公共广播电台的节目“等一等”中参加了“欺骗听众”的游戏。别告诉我!(丹弗斯,2013)。他通过正确选择真实但相当晦涩的关于有香味的加拿大货币的故事赢得了游戏。听众是如何做出这样的选择的,因为他脑子里不太可能有做出这个决定的相关信息?在本章中,我们回顾了人们在决定某事是否真实时使用的认知策略和启发式。我们理解这一问题的方法是一种实验性的方法,其目标是隔离导致真相幻觉和虚假传播的特定机制。这本书中涵盖的许多误解是强大的,正是因为它们是心理过程组合的结果;没有一个简单的技巧可以让人们相信巴拉克·奥巴马不是在美国出生的,气候变化是一个骗局,或者通过大众媒体传播的其他说法是不受支持的。在这里,我们考虑陈述是如何被操纵的,使其看起来比实际更真实,为什么人们会不知不觉地相信他们最初知道不可靠的信息来源,以及声明的某些特征是如何相信不真实的事情的:错误信息的认知科学视角
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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