Little research is available on psychological interventions that can counter susceptibility to polarizing online content. We conducted three studies (n1 = 472, n2 = 193, n3 = 772) to evaluate whether psychological resistance against polarizing social media content can be conferred. To do so, we use the Bad News game, a “technique-based inoculation” intervention which simulates a social media feed. We investigate (1) whether technique-based inoculation can reduce susceptibility to content designed to fuel intergroup polarization; (2) whether technique-based inoculation can offer cross-protection against misinformation techniques against which people were not inoculated; and 3) whether political ideology plays a role in how people engage with...
Recently the spread of fake news has become a serious concern. However, there is limited research ex...
Social media has been widely regarded as a significant contributor to the rising political polarizat...
Online news consumers have the tendency to select political news that confirms their prior attitudes...
Little research is available on psychological interventions that can counter susceptibility to polar...
This study finds that the online “fake news” game, Bad News, can confer psychological resistance aga...
Recent research has explored the possibility of building attitudinal resistance against online misin...
Misinformation has deleterious and potentially destabilizing effects on democracy. As a result, scho...
Misinformation can have a profound detrimental impact on populations' wellbeing. In this large UK-ba...
Abstract: The spread of online misinformation poses serious challenges to societies worldwide. In a ...
Building misinformation resilience at scale continues to pose a challenge. Gamified "inoculation" in...
Online misinformation is a pervasive global problem. In response, psychologists have recently explo...
Online misinformation continues to have adverse consequences for society. Inoculation theory has bee...
Since entering the post-truth digital age, awareness in false information spreading online has incre...
We explore if misinformation from political elites (i.e., members of the US Congress) and extreme pa...
The unchecked spread of misinformation is recognized as an increasing threat to public, scientific a...
Recently the spread of fake news has become a serious concern. However, there is limited research ex...
Social media has been widely regarded as a significant contributor to the rising political polarizat...
Online news consumers have the tendency to select political news that confirms their prior attitudes...
Little research is available on psychological interventions that can counter susceptibility to polar...
This study finds that the online “fake news” game, Bad News, can confer psychological resistance aga...
Recent research has explored the possibility of building attitudinal resistance against online misin...
Misinformation has deleterious and potentially destabilizing effects on democracy. As a result, scho...
Misinformation can have a profound detrimental impact on populations' wellbeing. In this large UK-ba...
Abstract: The spread of online misinformation poses serious challenges to societies worldwide. In a ...
Building misinformation resilience at scale continues to pose a challenge. Gamified "inoculation" in...
Online misinformation is a pervasive global problem. In response, psychologists have recently explo...
Online misinformation continues to have adverse consequences for society. Inoculation theory has bee...
Since entering the post-truth digital age, awareness in false information spreading online has incre...
We explore if misinformation from political elites (i.e., members of the US Congress) and extreme pa...
The unchecked spread of misinformation is recognized as an increasing threat to public, scientific a...
Recently the spread of fake news has become a serious concern. However, there is limited research ex...
Social media has been widely regarded as a significant contributor to the rising political polarizat...
Online news consumers have the tendency to select political news that confirms their prior attitudes...