Authors
Magdalena Wischnewski, Rebecca Bernemann, Thao Ngo, Nicole Krämer
Publication date
2021/5/6
Book
Proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Pages
1-11
Description
In this paper, we investigate the human ability to distinguish political social bots from humans on Twitter. Following motivated reasoning theory from social and cognitive psychology, our central hypothesis is that especially those accounts which are opinion-incongruent are perceived as social bot accounts when the account is ambiguous about its nature. We also hypothesize that credibility ratings mediate this relationship. We asked N = 151 participants to evaluate 24 Twitter accounts and decide whether the accounts were humans or social bots. Findings support our motivated reasoning hypothesis for a sub-group of Twitter users (those who are more familiar with Twitter): Accounts that are opinion-incongruent are evaluated as relatively more bot-like than accounts that are opinion-congruent. Moreover, it does not matter whether the account is clearly social bot or human or ambiguous about its nature. This was …
Total citations
2022202320244104
Scholar articles
M Wischnewski, R Bernemann, T Ngo, N Krämer - Proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human …, 2021