Epistemic language in news headlines shapes readers' perceptions of objectivity

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Chuey, Aaron; Luo, Yiwei; Markman, Ellen M.
署名单位:
Stanford University; Stanford University
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-14190
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2314091121
发表日期:
2024-05-14
关键词:
generic statements CHILDREN media misinformation polarization INFORMATION discourse
摘要:
How we reason about objectivity-whether an assertion has a ground truth-has implications for belief formation on wide - ranging topics. For example, if someone perceives climate change to be a matter of subjective opinion similar to the best movie genre, they may consider empirical claims about climate change as mere opinion and irrelevant to their beliefs. Here, we investigate whether the language employed by journalists might influence the perceived objectivity of news claims. Specifically, we ask whether factive verb framing (e.g., Scientists know climate change is happening) increases perceived objectivity compared to nonfactive framing (e.g., Scientists believe [...]). Across eight studies (N = 2,785), participants read news headlines about unique, noncontroversial topics (studies 1a-b, 2a-b) or a familiar, controversial topic (climate change; studies 3a-b, 4a-b) and rated the truth and objectivity of the headlines' claims. Across all eight studies, when claims were presented as beliefs (e.g., Tortoise breeders believe tortoises are becoming more popular pets), people consistently judged those claims as more subjective than claims presented as knowledge (e.g., Tortoise breeders know...), as well as claims presented as unattributed generics (e.g., Tortoises are becoming more popular pets). Surprisingly, verb framing had relatively little, inconsistent influence over participants' judgments of the truth of claims. These results demonstrate how, apart from shaping whether we believe a claim is true or false, epistemic language in media can influence whether we believe a claim has an objective answer at all.