(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON – Debunking, “prebunking,” nudging and teaching digital literacy are several of the more effective ways to counter misinformation, according to a new report from the American Psychological Association.
Written by a panel of U.S. and international experts on the psychology of misinformation, the report outlines the processes that make people susceptible to misinformation and offers solutions to combat it.
People are more likely to believe misinformation if it comes from groups they belong to or if they judge the source as credible, according to the report “Using Psychological Science to Understand and Fight Health Misinformation: An APA Consensus Statement.” It defines misinformation as “any information that is demonstrably false or otherwise misleading, regardless of its source or intention.”
The report outlines the key features of misinformation that fool people into believing and spreading it. For instance, it found that people are more likely to believe false statements that appeal to emotions such as fear and outrage. They are also more likely to believe misinformation that paints groups that they view as “others” in a negative light. And people are more likely to believe information the more it is repeated, even when it contradicts their prior knowledge. These findings suggest that it is important to stop misinformation early, the report says.
The report also describes features of social media that help misinformation spread very quickly. “Rapid publication and peer-to-peer sharing allow ordinary users to distribute information quickly to large audiences, so misinformation can be policed only after the fact (if at all),” the report says. “’Echo chambers’ bind and isolate online communities with similar views, which aids the spread of falsehoods and impedes the spread of factual corrections.”
As a result, “most online misinformation originates from a small minority of ‘superspreaders,’ but social media amplifies their reach and influence.”
There are two levels on which misinformation can be stopped, according to the report: systemic approaches, such as legislation and technology standards, and individual approaches focused on changing individual behaviors. The latter include:
fact-checking, or debunking;
prebunking, or pre-emptive debunking to prevent people from falling for misinformation in the first place;
nudges, such as asking people to consider the accuracy of information before sharing it, or rewarding people to be as accurate as possible;
and formal education or community outreach to raise people’s awareness about healthy online behavior and media use.
The report acknowledges that there is much more to learn and recommends more research funding and industry cooperation to understand behaviors related to misinformation and create tools to correct it. The panel members who wrote the report spent more than a year reviewing the scientific literature to develop their recommendations. The report was commissioned by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and funded as part of a $2 million grant to develop effective solutions to COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy.
While the panel’s recommendations focus on health misinformation, they can also be used for broader topics such as politics and climate change. For instance, these findings offer direct input to one of the main issues highlighted in APA’s Health Advisory on Social Media by addressing tactics that can be used to combat misinformation.
The report recommends eight steps for policymakers, scientists, media and the public to help curb the spread of misinformation and the risks it poses to health, well-being and civic life:
Avoid repeating misinformation without including a correction.
Collaborate with social media companies to understand and reduce the spread of harmful misinformation.
Use misinformation correction strategies with tools already proven to promote healthy behaviors.
Leverage trusted sources to counter misinformation and provide accurate health information.
Debunk misinformation often and repeatedly using evidence-based methods.
Prebunk misinformation to inoculate susceptible audiences by building skills and resilience from an early age.
Demand data access and transparency from social media companies for scientific research on misinformation.
Fund basic and translational research into the psychology of health misinformation, including ways to counter it.
“These psychological science findings help to explain how misinformation enters our thought processes,” the report states. “It is effortful and difficult for our brains to apply existing knowledge when encountering new information; when new claims are false but sufficiently reasonable, we can learn them as facts. Thus, everyone is susceptible to misinformation to some degree: we acquire it even when we know better.”
The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States. APA’s membership includes over 146,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance the creation, communication and application of psychological knowledge to benefit society and improve people’s lives.
END
Psychological science can help counter spread of misinformation, says APA report
Details systemic and individual strategies
2023-11-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Smartphone use differs between urban and rural areas
2023-11-29
Smartphones have altered human behavior in complex ways but context can also alter smartphone use. Laura Alessandretti and colleagues analyzed a dataset of 464,455 smartphone users from around the world, with 324,391 users categorized as urban and 52,290 categorized as rural. In most countries, urban users spent more time on their phones, using them for an average of 174.9 minutes a day, compared to 152.2 minutes for rural users. Urban users were more likely than rural users to spend time on apps categorized as maps and navigation (+150.0%), news (+38.7%), travel and local (+28.7%), music (+20.0%), business (+19.3%), and productivity (+13.7%) while rural users were more likely that urban users ...
Remote work, reduced pay: are we willing to make a trade?
2023-11-29
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to reshape the workforce, with almost half of Australian workers willing to sacrifice part of their annual salary to work from home.
New research by the University of South Australia has found that 45% of workers would be willing to accept a pay cut in exchange for remote work flexibility.
A survey of more than 1100 Australian workers in 2020-21 found that the average worker, who can carry out their role effectively at home, is willing to give up $3000 to $6000 in annual wages (4 to 8% of their salary). One fifth of participants would be willing to sacrifice $12 to $24,000 annually (16 to 33% of salaries).
However, ...
Chloride ions kill the stability of blue perovskite light emitting diodes
2023-11-29
Blue light-emitting diodes represent a fundamental element in the contemporary lighting and display technology landscape. Like prevailing technology such as III-V, organics and quantum dot LEDs, developing efficient and stable blue perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs) is a formidable challenge. Over the past few years, the research community has experienced a remarkable upsurge in the external quantum yields of blue PeLEDs, bringing them closer to the level of more mature technologies. Nevertheless, these blue PeLEDs continue to ...
Attending early education during pandemic provides sustained benefits for youngsters’ development
2023-11-29
The more time pre-schoolers spent in childcare during the first year of the pandemic, the more their vocabulary grew, a new study has found.
Research led by the University of Leeds found that attending Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) during the Covid-19 outbreak had sustained benefits for youngsters’ development.
Academics investigating the ongoing impact of Covid-related closures found that for each day of the week spent in ECEC, toddlers could produce an average of 29 more new words over the first year of the pandemic and ...
Understanding rapid tendon regeneration in newts may one day help human athletes
2023-11-29
A research group led by Nagoya University’s Graduate School of Engineering has uncovered how rapid tendon regeneration occurs in newts. The research, published in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research, compared the regeneration mechanism of damaged tendons in newts with those in mice. In the future, their findings could help physicians to treat human athletes recovering from tendon injuries.
Tendon injuries are a serious obstacle for athletes, who currently require several months ...
Project will look for rare-earth elements in Southeast Alaska seaweed
2023-11-29
A University of Alaska Fairbanks–led research team has been awarded a $1.9 million federal grant to explore whether seaweeds are absorbing rare-earth elements near a rich deposit in Southeast Alaska.
The study will focus on seaweeds in the waters near Bokan Mountain, a remote landmark on Prince of Wales Island known to contain rare-earth elements. Starting in March 2024, researchers will collect and analyze seaweed samples to determine whether significant amounts of metals that have washed into the ocean are being absorbed.
“We want to see if seaweeds accumulate ...
Researchers find connections between neuroinflammation and Alzheimer’s disease
2023-11-29
Study by Brigham investigators revealed how genetic changes in certain types of brain cells may contribute to the inflammatory response seen in Alzheimer’s disease
Immune-regulating brain cells known as microglia are known to play a role in the progression of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). A new study by investigators from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, explores how the genetics of microglia contribute to neuroinflammation and, in turn, AD. The team revealed that a reduction ...
Sexual assault survivors deserve a gold standard reporting experience
2023-11-29
A world-first report examining alternative ways for victim-survivors to report sexual assault says under-reporting could be reduced if moved away from law enforcement, but it will need greater support and funding to be sustainable and secure.
Only 13% of women report sexual assaults to police and 50% of victim-survivors seek help from a counselling or specialist support service, but alternative reporting options could help increase these numbers.
The research by RMIT University, University of Wollongong and La Trobe University found a trauma-informed, written interview designed in line with best-practice techniques could ...
New combination improves radiation therapy outcomes in patients with locally advanced and borderline resectable pancreatic cancer
2023-11-29
First author Cullen Taniguchi, M.D., Ph.D., passed away suddenly before the final publication of this study. A talented physician-scientist motivated by the impact of cancer on his own family, Taniguchi was committed to improving treatment options and outcomes for patients with gastrointestinal cancers as well as mentoring aspiring physicians and scientists.
“Dr. Taniguchi was a pioneer, committed to not accepting the low rates of survival in pancreatic cancer and transcending boundaries to improve outcomes,” said senior author Sarah Hoffe, M.D., of Moffitt ...
Plastic pollution from cigarette butts likely costs US$26 billion/year or US$186 billion over 10 years
2023-11-29
The costs of environmental pollution caused by plastics in cigarette butts and packaging amount to an estimated US$26 billion every year or US$186 billion every 10 years—adjusted for inflation—in waste management and marine ecosystem damage worldwide, finds a data analysis published online in the journal Tobacco Control.
These costs may seem small compared with the overall economic and human toll of tobacco, but they are cumulative and preventable, highlights the researcher.
And ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Frailty linked to higher risk of respiratory complications and death in smokers
Multifocus microscope pushes the limits of fast live 3D biological imaging
NRG Oncology opens new “ARCHER” clinical trial (NRG-GU015) testing a shorter treatment duration of radiation therapy for muscle invasive bladder cancer
Researchers mimic a mystery of nature to make ice move on its own
PLOS Biology announces agreement to become a MetaROR partner journal
Helicobacter pylori eradication may raise risk of reflux esophagitis, meta-analysis warns
UC San Diego awarded $80 million to expand clinical trials and train tomorrow's researcher leaders
KIER develops high-performance electrodes for seawater electrolysis to produce hydrogen
High-oxygen vacancy cerium catalysts with NiFe alloy heterostructures: A pathway to efficient and stable biomass ethanol fuel tubular solid oxide fuel cells
Research alert: Study finds that school-based online surveillance companies monitor students 24/7
Research alert: A microbial DNA signature differentiates two types of cancer in the live
Researchers use smart watches to better understand human activity
Terasaki Institute researchers reveal vagus nerve modulation as key to combating cancer-associated cachexia featured in cell
AI also assesses Dutch mammograms better than radiologists
High triglycerides drive life-threatening aortic aneurysms, study in mice finds
Minimally invasive procedure relieves painful symptoms of knee osteoarthritis
New research reveals the spark that ignites Mediterranean marine heatwaves
Researchers build first ‘microwave brain’ on a chip
Teens with higher blood levels of PFAS regain more weight after bariatric surgery, study finds
Discovery of ‘weird looking’ otter poo reveals how these animals shape nearby ecologies
River otters unfazed by feces and parasites while eating… and that’s good for ecosystems
From static to smart: HIT researchers developed programmable 4D-printed metamaterials that think, change, and perform multiple tasks
Back from the brink of extinction
Unlocking the power within: Recycling lithium batteries for a sustainable future
Adoption of AI-scribes by doctors raises ethical questions
65LAB awards US$1.5 million to Duke-NUS platform to advance antifibrotic drug discovery
Mount Sinai study supports evidence that prenatal acetaminophen use may be linked to increased risk of autism and ADHD
Big-data longevity specialist boosts HonorHealth Research Institute’s efforts to help patients lead longer, more productive lives
Helping others shown to slow cognitive decline
Youth violence prevention program shown to reduce arrests by up to 75%
[Press-News.org] Psychological science can help counter spread of misinformation, says APA reportDetails systemic and individual strategies