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A value-driven approach to addressing misinformation in social media

Interdisciplinary Studies

A value-driven approach to addressing misinformation in social media

N. Komendantova, L. Ekenberg, et al.

Explore a groundbreaking framework for assessing misinformation detection tools on social media, developed through discussions with policymakers, journalists, and citizens across Austria, Greece, and Sweden. Discover how trust, accountability, and cultural influences shape our understanding of misinformation, as researched by Nadejda Komendantova, Love Ekenberg, Mattias Svahn, Aron Larsson, Syed Iftikhar Hussain Shah, Myrsini Glinos, Vasilis Koulolias, and Mats Danielson.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Misinformation in social media is an actual and contested policy problem given its outreach and the variety of stakeholders involved. In particular, increased social media use makes the spread of misinformation almost universal. Here we demonstrate a framework for evaluating tools for detecting misinformation using a preference elicitation approach, as well as an integrated decision analytic process for evaluating desirable features of systems for combatting misinformation. The framework was tested in three countries (Austria, Greece, and Sweden) with three groups of stakeholders (policymakers, journalists, and citizens). Multi-criteria decision analysis was the methodological basis for the research. The results showed that participants prioritised information regarding the actors behind the distribution of misinformation and tracing the life cycle of misinformative posts. Another important criterion was whether someone intended to delude others, which shows a preference for trust, accountability, and quality in, for instance, journalism. Also, how misinformation travels is important. However, all criteria that involved active contributions to dealing with misinformation were ranked low in importance, which shows that participants may not have felt personally involved enough in the subject or situation. The results also show differences in preferences for tools that are influenced by cultural background and that might be considered in the further development of tools.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jan 29, 2021
Authors
Nadejda Komendantova, Love Ekenberg, Mattias Svahn, Aron Larsson, Syed Iftikhar Hussain Shah, Myrsini Glinos, Vasilis Koulolias, Mats Danielson
Tags
misinformation
social media
decision analysis
cultural influences
trust
accountability
tools
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