尼日利亚社交媒体用户对COVID-19头条新闻的真相辨别能力较差,这与快乐和惊讶有关

Leah R. Rosenzweig, Bence Bagó, Adam J. Berinsky, David G. Rand
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引用次数: 16

摘要

我们在阅读标题后所经历的情绪是否能帮助我们辨别真假信息或影响我们的判断?了解情绪是否与区分真假和分享信息有关,对旨在遏制错误信息传播的干预措施具有启示意义。在尼日利亚的1341名Facebook用户中,我们发现情绪,特别是快乐和惊讶,与真实的COVID-19标题相比,更相信和分享虚假的标题。不支持执政党的年龄较大的回答者的反思能力更强,辨别真假的能力更强。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Happiness and surprise are associated with worse truth discernment of COVID-19 headlines among social media users in Nigeria
Do emotions we experience after reading headlines help us discern true from false information or cloud our judgement? Understanding whether emotions are associated with distinguishing truth from fiction and sharing information has implications for interventions designed to curb the spread of misinformation. Among 1,341 Facebook users in Nigeria, we find that emotions—specifically happiness and surprise—are associated with greater belief in and sharing of false, relative to true, COVID-19 headlines. Respondents who are older are more reflective, and do not support the ruling party are better at discerning true from false COVID-19 information.
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CiteScore
20.70
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