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Fighting COVID-19 Misinformation on Social Media: Experimental Evidence for a Scalable Accuracy-Nudge Intervention

Gordon PennycookDepartment of Psychology, University of ReginaJonathon McPhetresKenneth Levene Graduate School of Business, University of ReginaYunhao ZhangSloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyJackson G. LuSloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDavid G. RandDepartment of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2020en
ABI

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Across two studies with more than 1,700 U.S. adults recruited online, we present evidence that people share false claims about COVID-19 partly because they simply fail to think sufficiently about whether or not the content is accurate when deciding what to share. In Study 1, participants were far worse at discerning between true and false content when deciding what they would share on social media relative to when they were asked directly about accuracy. Furthermore, greater cognitive reflection and science knowledge were associated with stronger discernment. In Study 2, we found that a simple accuracy reminder at the beginning of the study (i.e., judging the accuracy of a non-COVID-19-related headline) nearly tripled the level of truth discernment in participants' subsequent sharing intentions. Our results, which mirror those found previously for political fake news, suggest that nudging people to think about accuracy is a simple way to improve choices about what to share on social media.

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