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M. Esther Del Moral Pérez; Jonathan Castañeda Fernández; Nerea López-Bouzas; M. Carmen Bellver Moreno – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2024
This study is part of the Surfing the Waves of Fake News (SURFake) project, involving 543 Spanish university students. Its purpose is to understand the variables related to potentially risky practices students engage in on social media and their educational shortcomings. An opinion questionnaire was used to establish levels of vulnerability to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Social Media, At Risk Persons
Carolyn Palmquist; Robyn Kondrad – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
Three-year-olds often respond to lies as if they were true or with no clear rationale. Individual differences influence children's processing of misinformation. Here, we explore how two contextual cues (children's conflicting first-hand knowledge and different information sources) affect their ability to correctly interpret and respond to…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Misinformation, Comparative Analysis, Decision Making
Robert W. Danielson; Neil G. Jacobson; Erika A. Patall; Gale M. Sinatra; Olusola O. Adesope; Alana A. U. Kennedy; Bethany H. Bhat; Onur Ramazan; Blessing Akinrotimi; Gabriel Nketah; Gan Jin; Oluwafemi J. Sunday – Educational Psychologist, 2025
Misinformation around scientific issues is rampant on social media platforms, raising concerns among educators and science communicators. A variety of approaches have been explored to confront this growing threat to science literacy. For example, refutations have been used both proactively as warning labels and in attempts to inoculate against…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Scientific Research, Social Media, Scientific Literacy
Shan Mohammed; Quinn Grundy; Jessica Bytautas – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2024
Post-truth strategies are characterized by the manipulation of facts and personal assertions of the truth for political gain. By seeding polarization, skepticism, and mistrust, post-truth presents challenges to teaching and learning within academic settings. In this paper, we explore how post-truth is articulated in higher education literature…
Descriptors: Ethics, Misinformation, Deception, Trust (Psychology)
Ilic, Sandra; Damnjanovic, Kaja – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Pseudo-profound bullshit pertains to grammatically and syntactically correct but meaningless sentences, that, due to syntactical correctness appear as made to communicate something and research shows that people deem them profound. However, the effect of differing source credibility on bullshit profoundness evaluations has, to our knowledge, not…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Credibility, Syntax, Proverbs
Biddlestone, Mikey; Roozenbeek, Jon; van der Linden, Sander – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Psychological inoculation has proven effective at reducing susceptibility to misinformation. We present a novel storytelling approach to inoculation against susceptibility to the conjunction fallacy (d[subscript meta-analysis] = 0.82), a known cognitive predictor of conspiracy beliefs. In Study 1 (Pilot; N = 161), a narrative inoculation (vs.…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Deception, Ethics, Information Sources
Alessandro Siani; Maria Joseph; Claudiu Dacin – Discover Education, 2024
In the current post-truth era, the ability to assess the reliability of information is an essential citizenship attribute. With nearly half of the present internet traffic estimated to be generated by bots, and misinformation being regularly weaponised by numerous parties for economic or political gain, it is imperative that citizens are equipped…
Descriptors: News Reporting, Misinformation, Secondary School Students, Science Education
Michael, Robert B.; Breaux, Brooke O. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
The 2016 US Presidential campaign saw an explosion in popularity for the term "fake news." This phenomenon raises interesting questions: Which news sources do people believe are fake, and what do people think "fake news" means? One possibility is that beliefs about the news reflect a bias to disbelieve information that…
Descriptors: Political Affiliation, Political Attitudes, Beliefs, Deception
Nagler, Rebekah H.; Vogel, Rachel I.; Rothman, Alexander J.; Yzer, Marco C.; Gollust, Sarah E. – Health Education & Behavior, 2023
Background: Exposure to conflicting health information can produce negative affective and cognitive responses, including confusion and backlash, and the effects of this exposure can even "carry over" and reduce people's receptivity to subsequent messages about health behaviors for which there is scientific consensus. What is not known is…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Health Behavior, Longitudinal Studies, Trust (Psychology)
Grady, Rebecca Hofstein; Ditto, Peter H.; Loftus, Elizabeth F. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
Politically oriented "fake news"--false stories or headlines created to support or attack a political position or person--is increasingly being shared and believed on social media. Many online platforms have taken steps to address this by adding a warning label to articles identified as false, but past research has shown mixed evidence…
Descriptors: Deception, News Reporting, Political Attitudes, Social Media
Reem M. Al Zou'bi – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2022
This research investigated the impact of media and information literacy (MIL) on education faculty students' acquisition of the skills needed to detect fake news. A one-group experimental design was employed with a randomly selected sample of 100 Jordanian undergraduate students. The participants completed one pre-test and two post-tests, each of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Media Literacy, Information Literacy
Nadarevic, Lena; Reber, Rolf; Helmecke, Anne Josephine; Köse, Dilara – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2020
To better understand the spread of fake news in the Internet age, it is important to uncover the variables that influence the perceived truth of information. Although previous research identified several reliable predictors of truth judgments--such as source credibility, repeated information exposure, and presentation format--little is known about…
Descriptors: Deception, Internet, Ethics, Social Media
Kemp, Paige L.; Alexander, Timothy R.; Wahlheim, Christopher N. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
Fake news can impair memory leading to societal controversies such as COVID-19 vaccine efficacy. The pernicious influence of fake news is clear when ineffective corrections leave memories outdated. A key theoretical issue is whether people should recall fake news while reading corrections with contradictory details. The familiarity backfire view…
Descriptors: Deception, News Reporting, Memory, Social Problems
Cetinkaya, Ertan; Saribas, Deniz – Science & Education, 2023
In a pandemic era, it is necessary to equip individuals with the ability to make informed decisions about health issues, especially in relation to viruses and vaccines. In order to achieve this goal, science educators need to explore students' decisions and reasoning about vaccination. The aim of the study reported in the paper, therefore, is to…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Immunization Programs, Decision Making, Diseases
Ding, Xiao Pan; Lim, Hui Yan; Heyman, Gail D. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Learning from others allows young children to acquire vast amounts of information quickly, but doing so effectively also requires epistemic vigilance. Although preschool-age children have some capacity to engage in such processes, they often have trouble resisting information from misleading informants. The present research takes a "novel…
Descriptors: Deception, Preschool Children, Recognition (Psychology), Task Analysis