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COVID Misinformation Tough To Stop On Social Media: Study

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread, health care organizations are focusing all of their efforts on slowing the spread of the corona virus and caring for patients. The study says digital platforms are increasingly becoming the primary sources of fake news and misinformation. Social media platforms and other digital platforms also are playing a massive damaging role in spreading misconstructed and wrong information about COVID-19.

Covid Misinformation on Social Media
COVID-19 pandemic information
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Published : Dec 9, 2020, 11:56 AM IST

Researchers have revealed two of the reasons that misinformation about COVID-19 is so difficult to tackle on social media, most people think they're above average at spotting misinformation and misinformation often triggers negative emotions that resonate with people. Author Yang Cheng from the North Carolina State University says that This study gives us more insight into how users respond to misinformation about the pandemic on social media platforms. He added that It also gives us the information we can use to share accurate information more effectively.

For the results, researchers conducted a survey of 1,793 US adults. The survey asked a range of questions designed to address four issues.

The Questions Were: The extent to which study participants felt they and others were affected by COVID misinformation online, the extent to which misinformation triggered negative emotions, their support for government restrictions on social media and misinformation, and their support for media literacy training and other corrective actions.

One of the most powerful findings was that study participants overwhelmingly thought that other people were more vulnerable to misinformation. This phenomenon is known as the "third-person effect," which predicts that people perceive media messages as having a greater effect on others than on themselves. Cheng said that "This makes it harder to get people to participate in media literacy education or training efforts because it suggests that most people think everyone else needs the training more than they do. The researchers also found that content containing misinformation was likely to evoke negative emotions such as fear, worry, and disgust. That's troubling for two reasons.

They found that the better an individual thought he or she was at detecting misinformation in relation to everyone else, the more likely that individual was to support both government restrictions on misinformation and corrective actions, such as media literacy education.

Researchers have revealed two of the reasons that misinformation about COVID-19 is so difficult to tackle on social media, most people think they're above average at spotting misinformation and misinformation often triggers negative emotions that resonate with people. Author Yang Cheng from the North Carolina State University says that This study gives us more insight into how users respond to misinformation about the pandemic on social media platforms. He added that It also gives us the information we can use to share accurate information more effectively.

For the results, researchers conducted a survey of 1,793 US adults. The survey asked a range of questions designed to address four issues.

The Questions Were: The extent to which study participants felt they and others were affected by COVID misinformation online, the extent to which misinformation triggered negative emotions, their support for government restrictions on social media and misinformation, and their support for media literacy training and other corrective actions.

One of the most powerful findings was that study participants overwhelmingly thought that other people were more vulnerable to misinformation. This phenomenon is known as the "third-person effect," which predicts that people perceive media messages as having a greater effect on others than on themselves. Cheng said that "This makes it harder to get people to participate in media literacy education or training efforts because it suggests that most people think everyone else needs the training more than they do. The researchers also found that content containing misinformation was likely to evoke negative emotions such as fear, worry, and disgust. That's troubling for two reasons.

They found that the better an individual thought he or she was at detecting misinformation in relation to everyone else, the more likely that individual was to support both government restrictions on misinformation and corrective actions, such as media literacy education.

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