Publication | Open Access
Sex Trafficking, Russian Infiltration, Birth Certificates, and Pedophilia: A Survey Experiment Correcting Fake News
69
Citations
4
References
2018
Year
Fake NewsSex TraffickingMedia StandardsHuman TraffickingPublic OpinionCommunicationMisinformationMedia StudiesJournalismSocial SciencesGender StudiesPolitical CommunicationDisinformation DetectionPost-truthBirth CertificatesMedia InstitutionsMedia BiasSexual CrimeU.s. ElectionRussian InfiltrationSexual BehaviorFact CheckingNews ConsumptionMass CommunicationArtsPolitical ScienceFake News Publishers
Following the 2016 U.S. election, researchers and policymakers have become intensely concerned about the dissemination of “fake news,” or false news stories in circulation (Lazer et al., 2017). Research indicates that fake news is shared widely and has a pro-Republican tilt (Allcott and Gentzkow, 2017). Facebook now flags dubious stories as disputed and tries to block fake news publishers (Mosseri, 2016). While the typical misstatements of politicians can be corrected (Nyhan et al., 2017), the sheer depth of fake news’s conspiracizing may preclude correction. Can fake news be corrected?
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1