Publication | Closed Access
From Rumors to Facts, and Facts to Rumors: The Role of Certainty Decay in Consumer Communications
77
Citations
39
References
2011
Year
Fake NewsConsumer UncertaintyBehavioral Decision MakingRumor ComeConsumer ResearchPublic OpinionSocial InfluenceCommunicationRumor SpreadingMisinformationRisk CommunicationCore BeliefsManagementMarketing CommunicationConsumer BehaviorDisinformation DetectionConsumer CommunicationsCertainty InformationConsumer Decision MakingCertainty DecayStrategic CommunicationCommunication EffectsTrustPopular CommunicationMarketingPublic Perception StudiesInteractive MarketingInformation DiffusionMass CommunicationArtsPersuasion
How does a rumor come to be believed as a fact as it spreads across a chain of consumers? This research proposes that because consumers’ certainty about their beliefs (e.g., attitudes, opinions) is less salient than the beliefs themselves, certainty information is more susceptible to being lost in communication. Consistent with this idea, the current studies reveal that though consumers transmit their core beliefs when they communicate with one another, they often fail to transmit their certainty or uncertainty about those beliefs. Thus, a belief originally associated with high uncertainty (certainty) tends to lose this uncertainty (certainty) across communications. The authors demonstrate that increasing the salience of consumers’ uncertainty/certainty when communicating or receiving information can improve uncertainty/certainty communication, and they investigate the consequences for rumor management and word-of-mouth communications.
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