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How emotions fuel fake news on social media

Tags
  • Health and Wellness
  • Innovation and Research
  • Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business
  • School of Education

There鈥檚 no shortage of stories about the algorithms and social media platforms that amplify misinformation and aid the spread of fake news. But behind all that technology, there鈥檚 someone sitting at their computer getting worked up enough to click the share button.

A led by a 51精品视频 father-daughter duo looks into how peoples鈥 emotions are sparked by false political headlines 鈥 and how their reactions determine whether they share those stories with others.

鈥淓motions do really seem to matter in terms of the spread of fake news,鈥 said Christy Galletta Horner (A&S 鈥05, EDUC 鈥13G, 鈥15G), now an assistant professor at Bowling Green State University and the study鈥檚 lead author. 鈥淓motions get ignored a lot in research, and I think in this case that could be a mistake.鈥

Concerned by the increasing presence of misleading news stories in the past few years, Galletta Horner jumped on the chance to study the trend when approached by then-graduate student Abhijeet Shirsat about his thesis on the topic.

During the 2020 election听season, the team presented 879 participants with online surveys and showed them one of eight fake news headlines that covered topics from political scandals to candidate health concerns and implicated either Joe Biden or Donald Trump. The survey asked whether they would share the headline or share opposing information, as well as how it made them feel.

[Another father-daughter duo at 51精品视频 is studying vaccine disinformation online.]

Participants, the team found, fell roughly into three groups. The first was the most likely to say they would share the fake news headlines. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a group that鈥檚 just high on all emotions, this set of people we called 鈥榟ot,鈥欌 said , co-author, professor of business administration at 51精品视频鈥檚 Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business and father of Galletta Horner. 鈥淪o we can't just say anger drives it all, or happiness drives it all. It really depends.鈥

Another, which the team called 鈥渦pset鈥 users, had a mostly negative response to seeing the headlines. The majority, though, fit into what the researchers called the 鈥渃old鈥 group, which didn鈥檛 have much of a reaction at all and were less likely to share anything.

Participants鈥 political affiliations affected how they responded, too: Unsurprisingly, they were more likely to share negative headlines about an opposing party. But the researchers also found differences specific to political parties.

鈥淚ndependents seem to be the most skeptical of all, and Republicans believed the fake headlines more, even if they were about Trump,鈥 said Galletta. The researchers noted, however, that participants were recruited online and weren鈥檛 necessarily representative of the political makeup of the U.S. 听

The team, including Bowling Green State University graduate student Jennifer Crawford, published their results in the Journal of Management Information Systems on Jan. 2.

鈥淚t was surprising to see how many people just don鈥檛 care,鈥 added Galletta. He sees this 鈥渃old鈥 group as having the potential to be mobilized by appealing to their emotions. 鈥淚 think that the majority would be people who, if they had their emotions raised, would suppress the fake news鈥 by posting information to counter it, he said.

While social media platforms have recently tried to counter misinformation by adding warnings to posts, Galletta Horner noted that this new research indicates this approach may only go so far.

鈥淏y that point, if they鈥檙e invested in the information, they鈥檙e going to find a way to explain it away,鈥 she said.

For Galletta Horner, any technological or regulatory approach needs to be accompanied by an educational one. 鈥淚f people become more aware of the reason that they feel a certain way when they see a headline, they鈥檙e more likely to pause after they feel the emotion,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd hopefully kick in some of those cognitive processes where they can judge the source of the information.鈥

[The 51精品视频 Disinformation Lab is trying to understand malicious influences online.]

Although the study focuses on an urgent, current phenomenon, in one sense it鈥檚 been in the works for decades.

鈥淚 have had it on my bucket list for many years to publish a paper with Christy,鈥 Galletta said. 鈥淢y daughter studies something that鈥檚 fascinating to me, and she鈥檚 an exquisite writer.鈥

Since her childhood, Galletta has been telling his daughter that being a professor is the best job in the world. Now that she has a research lab of her own studying emotions in social contexts, she agrees. 鈥淚 absolutely love what I do,鈥 Galletta Horner said. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 so thankful that he was a role model for me in that position.鈥

Working together required more than a little negotiation thanks to their different academic disciplines and research approaches. For both, it required stretching out of their typical areas of study 鈥 but that stretch ended up being a productive one.

鈥淔ake news is a social problem that we鈥檙e both really concerned about, and there鈥檚 just a huge need to come up with creative solutions and different angles,鈥 Galletta Horner said. 鈥淏ut my favorite part of it was just getting to spend a lot of time with my dad.鈥

鈥 Patrick Monahan