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Filter Bubbles, Echo Chambers and Fake News: How Social Media Conditions Individuals to be Less Critical of Political Misinformation

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ICPSR2021-01-01 更新2026-04-16 收录
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https://www.openicpsr.org/openicpsr/project/135024/version/V2/view?path=/openicpsr/135024/fcr:versions/V2/data-final.dta&type=file
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Social media platforms have been found to be the primary gateway through which individuals are exposed to fake news. The algorithmic filter bubbles and echo chambers that have popularized these platforms may also increase exposure to fake news. Because of this, scholars have suggested disrupting the stream of congruent information that filter bubbles and echo chambers produce, as this may reduce the impact and circulation of misinformation. To test this, a survey experiment was conducted via Amazon MTurk. Participants read ten short stories that were either all fake or half real and half fake. These treatment conditions were made up of stories agreeable to the perspective of Democrats, Republicans, or a mix of both. The results show that participants assigned to conditions that were agreeable to their political world view found fake stories more believable compared to participants who received a heterogeneous mix of news stories complementary to both world views. However, this "break up" effect appears confined to Democratic participants; findings indicate that Republicans assigned to filter bubble treatment conditions believed fake news stories at approximately the same rate as their fellow partisans receiving a heterogeneous mix of news items. This suggests that a potential "break up" may only influence more progressive users.<br><br>Data included in this deposit:<br><br>The Stata .dta fileThe Stata .do file used to generate tables and figures featured in the paperA .pdf file containing the text of the fake and real news items used in the paperA .pdf file containing the complete survey text
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Utah Valley University
创建时间:
2021-01-01
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