对西班牙语社交媒体的依赖如何预测拉美人对虚假政治叙事的信仰。

IF 2.2 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
PNAS nexus Pub Date : 2024-11-19 eCollection Date: 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae442
Marisa Abrajano, Marianna Garcia, Aaron Pope, Robert Vidigal, Joshua A Tucker, Jonathan Nagler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国的社交媒体上,虚假的政治叙事几乎不可避免。对于拉美裔人,尤其是依赖西班牙语社交媒体获取新闻和信息的人来说,这个问题尤为严重。研究表明,拉美裔比非西班牙裔白人更依赖社交媒体和信息平台,因此容易受到错误信息的影响。此外,西班牙语的事实核查算法并不像英语那样强大,而社交媒体平台在打击英语媒体上的错误信息方面要比西班牙语媒体付出更多的努力,这就增加了他们接触到错误信息的可能性。因此,我们预计,与主要依赖英语社交媒体获取新闻的拉美人相比,使用西班牙语社交媒体的拉美人更有可能相信虚假的政治叙事。为了验证这一预期,我们进行了迄今为止最大规模的在线调查,调查内容包括社交媒体的使用情况以及拉美人对政治虚假信息的看法。我们的研究是在 2022 年中期选举前后的几个月中进行的,研究了社交媒体上以西班牙语和英语流传的各种虚假政治言论。我们发现,依赖社交媒体获取新闻可预测一个人是否相信虚假政治故事,与使用英语社交媒体的拉美人相比,使用西班牙语社交媒体的拉美人相信虚假政治叙述的概率更高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How reliance on Spanish-language social media predicts beliefs in false political narratives amongst Latinos.

False political narratives are nearly inescapable on social media in the United States. They are a particularly acute problem for Latinos, and especially for those who rely on Spanish-language social media for news and information. Studies have shown that Latinos are vulnerable to misinformation because they rely more heavily on social media and messaging platforms than non-Hispanic whites. Moreover, fact-checking algorithms are not as robust in Spanish as they are in English, and social media platforms put far more effort into combating misinformation on English-language media than Spanish-language media, which compounds the likelihood of being exposed to misinformation. As a result, we expect that Latinos who use Spanish-language social media to be more likely to believe in false political narratives when compared with Latinos who primarily rely on English-language social media for news. To test this expectation, we fielded the largest online survey to date of social media usage and belief in political misinformation of Latinos. Our study, fielded in the months leading up to and following the 2022 midterm elections, examines a variety of false political narratives that were circulating in both Spanish and English on social media. We find that social media reliance for news predicts one's belief in false political stories, and that Latinos who use Spanish-language social media have a higher probability of believing in false political narratives, compared with Latinos using English-language social media.

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