Authors
Melisa Basol, Jon Roozenbeek, Sander van der Linden
Publication date
2020
Journal
Journal of Cognition
Volume
3
Issue
1
Pages
1-9
Publisher
Ubiquity Press
Description
Recent research has explored the possibility of building attitudinal resistance against online misinformation through psychological inoculation. The inoculation metaphor relies on a medical analogy: by pre-emptively exposing people to weakened doses of misinformation cognitive immunity can be conferred. A recent example is the Bad News game, an online fake news game in which players learn about six common misinformation techniques. We present a replication and extension into the effectiveness of Bad News as an anti-misinformation intervention. We address three shortcomings identified in the original study: the lack of a control group, the relatively low number of test items, and the absence of attitudinal certainty measurements. Using a 2 (treatment vs. control)× 2 (pre vs. post) mixed design (N= 196) we measure participants’ ability to spot misinformation techniques in 18 fake headlines before and after …
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