4.2 Article

Disinformation Sharing Thrives with Fear of Missing Out among Low Cognitive News Users: A Cross-national Examination of Intentional Sharing of Deep Fakes

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Communication

Navigating the maze: Deepfakes, cognitive ability, and social media news skepticism

Saifuddin Ahmed

Summary: This study is one of the early researches on the social impact of deepfakes. The results suggest that exposure to deepfakes and concerns about them are positively related to skepticism towards news on social media. However, frequent users of social media as a news platform are less skeptical. Higher cognitive individuals are more skeptical of social media news. Moreover, among those who are more concerned about deepfakes, inadvertently sharing deepfake content is associated with heightened skepticism, especially among individuals with lower cognitive abilities.

NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY (2023)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Shifting attention to accuracy can reduce misinformation online

Gordon Pennycook et al.

Summary: In recent years, there has been growing concern over the spread of false information on social media. Research has shown that while most people value sharing accurate news, the veracity of headlines does not necessarily impact their intentions to share. By shifting attention to accuracy, the quality of news that people share can be improved, challenging the belief that people prioritize partisanship over accuracy.

NATURE (2021)

Article Psychology, Social

Fooled by the fakes: Cognitive differences in perceived claim accuracy and sharing intention of non-political deepfakes

Saifuddin Ahmed

Summary: The study explores how individual differences and cognitive ability influence the perceived accuracy of deepfake claims and sharing intention. Adding corrective labels can reduce inadvertent sharing of disinformation, and user biases should be taken into account to understand public engagement with disinformation.

PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES (2021)

Review Behavioral Sciences

The Psychology of Fake News

Gordon Pennycook et al.

Summary: Research shows that people are better at discerning truth from falsehood when evaluating politically related news, poor truth discernment is mainly associated with lack of critical thinking and relevant knowledge. There is a notable disconnect between what people believe and what they share on social media, which can be addressed by nudging users to focus more on accuracy and leveraging crowdsourced veracity ratings to improve social media algorithms.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2021)

Article Psychology, Social

Individual differences in Fear of Missing Out (FoMO): Age, gender, and the Big Five personality trait domains, facets, and items

Dmitri Rozgonjuk et al.

Summary: Fear of Missing Out (FoMO) is not gender-specific, but more prevalent among younger individuals. Neuroticism is positively correlated with FoMO, while Extraversion, Openness to Experience, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness show negative associations. Conscientiousness consistently demonstrates small negative links with FoMO across various levels.

PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES (2021)

Article Information Science & Library Science

Who inadvertently shares deepfakes? Analyzing the role of political interest, cognitive ability, and social network size

Saifuddin Ahmed

Summary: The social and democratic implications of deepfakes technology are widely debated, but little is known about how online users engage with it. This study explores the inadvertent sharing behavior of deepfakes by citizens, finding that those with higher political interests and lower cognitive abilities are more likely to share deepfakes inadvertently. Additionally, the relationship between political interest and deepfakes sharing is significantly moderated by network size, with politically interested citizens more likely to share deepfakes in larger social networks.

TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS (2021)

Article Communication

Incidental News Exposure on Facebook as a Social Experience: The Influence of Recommender and Media Cues on News Selection

Johannes Kaiser et al.

Summary: The incidental exposure to shared news on Facebook is important for citizens' political engagement, but remains understudied. This experiment explores how recommender characteristics and different media sources influence incidental exposure to political news on Facebook. Results suggest that strong ties and recommenders with high knowledge increase news exposure, with knowledge impact limited to recommenders with similar political opinions. Media sources also independently impact news exposure, mediated through media perceptions, while recommender effects work via the desire for social monitoring and perceived issue importance.

COMMUNICATION RESEARCH (2021)

Article Environmental Studies

Online misinformation about climate change

Kathie M. d'I. Treen et al.

WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE (2020)

Article Communication

Too good to be true, too good not to share: the social utility of fake news

Andrew Duffy et al.

INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY (2020)

Article Psychology, Experimental

Overconfidently underthinking: narcissism negatively predicts cognitive reflection

Shane Littrell et al.

THINKING & REASONING (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Less than you think: Prevalence and predictors of fake news dissemination on Facebook

Andrew Guess et al.

SCIENCE ADVANCES (2019)

Article Computer Science, Information Systems

SAYS WHO? THE EFFECTS OF PRESENTATION FORMAT AND SOURCE RATING ON FAKE NEWS IN SOCIAL MEDIA

Antino Kim et al.

MIS QUARTERLY (2019)

Article Communication

An Exploratory Study of Fake News and Media Trust in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa

Herman Wasserman et al.

AFRICAN JOURNALISM STUDIES (2019)

Review Management

The Emergence of Deepfake Technology: A Review

Mika Westerlund

TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION MANAGEMENT REVIEW (2019)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

The science of fake news

David M. J. Lazer et al.

SCIENCE (2018)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

The spread of true and false news online

Soroush Vosoughi et al.

SCIENCE (2018)

Review Behavioral Sciences

The Partisan Brain: An Identity-Based Model of Political Belief

Jay J. Van Bavel et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2018)

Article Political Science

How Social Media Facilitates Political Protest: Information, Motivation, and Social Networks

John T. Jost et al.

POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY (2018)

Article Information Science & Library Science

Replacement or complement: A niche analysis of Yahoo news, television news, and electronic news

Shu-Chu Sarrina Li

TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS (2017)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Motivators of online vulnerability: The impact of social network site use and FOMO

Sarah L. Buglass et al.

COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR (2017)

Article Information Science & Library Science

Uses and Gratifications of digital photo sharing on Facebook

Aqdas Malik et al.

TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS (2016)

Article Education & Educational Research

Social Media Use and the Fear of Missing Out (FoMO) While Studying Abroad

Patricia R. Hetz et al.

JOURNAL OF RESEARCH ON TECHNOLOGY IN EDUCATION (2015)

Article Information Science & Library Science

Why Students Share Misinformation on Social Media: Motivation, Gender, and Study-level Differences

Xinran Chen et al.

JOURNAL OF ACADEMIC LIBRARIANSHIP (2015)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

College students' academic motivation, media engagement and fear of missing out

Dorit Alt

COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR (2015)

Article Psychology, Clinical

Theory of Mind Impairments in Social Anxiety Disorder

Dianne M. Hezel et al.

BEHAVIOR THERAPY (2014)

Article Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism

Determinants of Sharing Travel Experiences in Social Media

Myunghwa Kang et al.

JOURNAL OF TRAVEL & TOURISM MARKETING (2013)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Motivational, emotional, and behavioral correlates of fear of missing out

Andrew K. Przybylski et al.

COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR (2013)

Article Communication

Social Media Use for News and Individuals' Social Capital, Civic Engagement and Political Participation

Homero Gil de Zuniga

JOURNAL OF COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION (2012)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

News sharing in social media: The effect of gratifications and prior experience

Chei Sian Lee et al.

COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR (2012)

Article Psychology, Social

Need for Cognition and the process of lie detection

Marc-Andre Reinhard

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY (2010)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Intelligence makes people think like economists: Evidence from the General Social Survey

Bryan Caplan et al.

INTELLIGENCE (2010)

Article Political Science

When Corrections Fail: The Persistence of Political Misperceptions

Brendan Nyhan et al.

POLITICAL BEHAVIOR (2010)

Article Political Science

After years of media coverage, can one more video report trigger heuristic judgments? A national study of American terrorism risk perceptions

James N. Breckenridge et al.

BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES OF TERRORISM AND POLITICAL AGGRESSION (2010)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

The relationships between cognitive ability and dynamic decision making

C Gonzalez et al.

INTELLIGENCE (2005)