Adherence to Misinformation on Social Media Through Socio-Cognitive and Group-Based Processes

06/30/2022
by   Alexandros Efstratiou, et al.
0

Previous work suggests that people's preference for different kinds of information depends on more than just accuracy. This could happen because the messages contained within different pieces of information may either be well-liked or repulsive. Whereas factual information must often convey uncomfortable truths, misinformation can have little regard for veracity and leverage psychological processes which increase its attractiveness and proliferation on social media. In this review, we argue that when misinformation proliferates, this happens because the social media environment enables adherence to misinformation by reducing, rather than increasing, the psychological cost of doing so. We cover how attention may often be shifted away from accuracy and towards other goals, how social and individual cognition is affected by misinformation and the cases under which debunking it is most effective, and how the formation of online groups affects information consumption patterns, often leading to more polarization and radicalization. Throughout, we make the case that polarization and misinformation adherence are closely tied. We identify ways in which the psychological cost of adhering to misinformation can be increased when designing anti-misinformation interventions or resilient affordances, and we outline open research questions that the CSCW community can take up in further understanding this cost.

READ FULL TEXT
research
04/18/2020

Sense-Giving Strategies of Media Organisations in Social Media Disaster Communication: Findings from Hurricane Harvey

Media organisations are essential communication stakeholders in social m...
research
12/12/2017

The Investigation of Social Media Data Thresholds for Opinion Formation

The pervasive use of social media has grown to over two billion users to...
research
11/10/2022

Combating Health Misinformation in Social Media: Characterization, Detection, Intervention, and Open Issues

Social media has been one of the main information consumption sources fo...
research
12/02/2019

Discovering Opioid Use Patterns from Social Media for Relapse Prevention

The United States is currently experiencing an unprecedented opioid cris...
research
07/15/2019

The Elusive Model of Technology, Media, Social Development, and Financial Sustainability

We recount in this essay the decade-long story of Gram Vaani, a social e...
research
07/13/2019

Information Pollution by Social Bots

Social media are vulnerable to deceptive social bots, which can imperson...
research
01/29/2023

Cultural Differences in Friendship Network Behaviors: A Snapchat Case Study

Culture shapes people's behavior, both online and offline. Surprisingly,...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset