Lying for Viewers: Commingled Partisan Falsehoods Increase Viewing and Sharing of News Media
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Seol, Seyoung; Mejia, Jorge; Dennis, Alan R.
署名单位:
University of Warwick; Indiana University System; IU Kelley School of Business; Indiana University Bloomington
刊物名称:
MIS QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0276-7783
DOI:
10.25300/MISQ/2023/17928
发表日期:
2024
页码:
551-582
关键词:
fake news
Social media
identification
experience
enjoyment
NORMS
POWER
user
摘要:
Is there an economic incentive for celebrities and well-known media firms to commingle falsehoods into news stories? We conducted five experiments, plus a field validation using secondary data. When presented by celebrities and well-known media firms, a commingled partisan falsehood in an otherwise true news story significantly increased viewing and sharing intentions among politically aligned viewers. The effect was weaker but significant when we replaced the celebrity with an unknown speaker and disappeared when both the celebrity and the well-known firm were replaced by unknowns. This effect was explained by confirmation bias and the viewer's belief that the falsehood was true. In contrast, a false news story focusing on the same falsehood increased viewing and sharing intentions only when presented by unknowns, with viewers' belief playing a limited role. The field study found a significantly positive relationship between a commingled partisan falsehood in videos of well-known media firms and actual viewership. We conclude that commingled partisan falsehoods provide a significant viewership increase for celebrities and well-known media firms, creating an economic incentive for lying and posing complex challenges in the fake news era. We discuss the challenges and opportunities in this area for policymakers and media firms.
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