Information Disorders, Moral Values and the Dispute of Narratives

08/16/2021
by   Daniel Schwabe, et al.
0

In this paper we propose a framework characterizing information disorders as disputes of narratives. Such narratives present claims to readers, who must decide whether to accept the statements in the claims as facts. We point out that this process requires establishing connections to moral values, since it has been shown that human decision making is heavily dependent on them. A simple example illustrating how this could be done is given, related to claims about fraud in the US 2020 Presidential elections.

READ FULL TEXT
research
10/25/2021

A strategy to identify event specific hospitalizations in large health claims database

Health insurance claims data offer a unique opportunity to study disease...
research
03/25/2023

From Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem to the completeness of bot religions (Extended abstract)

Hilbert and Ackermann asked for a method to consistently extend incomple...
research
01/26/2021

Applications of Clustering with Mixed Type Data in Life Insurance

Death benefits are generally the largest cash flow item that affects fin...
research
09/19/2023

Prompt, Condition, and Generate: Classification of Unsupported Claims with In-Context Learning

Unsupported and unfalsifiable claims we encounter in our daily lives can...
research
03/05/2020

Individual Claims Forecasting with Bayesian Mixture Density Networks

We introduce an individual claims forecasting framework utilizing Bayesi...
research
06/19/2017

On Optimal Group Claims at Voting in a Stochastic Environment

There is a paradox in the model of social dynamics determined by voting ...
research
06/08/2020

Misinformation has High Perplexity

Debunking misinformation is an important and time-critical task as there...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset