This study examines how age and exposure to different types of COVID-19 (mis)information affect misinformation beliefs, perceived credibility of the message, and intention-to-share it on WhatsApp. Two mixed-design online experiments in the UK and Brazil (N=1454) exposed adult WhatsApp users to full misinformation, partial misinformation, or full truth about garlic's therapeutic powers to cure COVID-19, followed by corrective information from the WHO. Younger adults (18–54) showed stronger misinformation beliefs in both countries. Older adults (55+) in the UK exhibited potential backfire effects from corrective information. WHO corrective information effectively enhanced perceived credibility and intention-to-share accurate information across all groups. The findings highlight the need for evidence-based infodemic interventions targeting younger adults.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Mar 23, 2021
Authors
Santosh Vijaykumar, Yan Jin, Daniel Rogerson, Xuerong Lu, Swati Sharma, Anna Maughan, Bianca Fadel, Mariella Silva de Oliveira Costa, Claudia Pagliari, Daniel Morris
Tags
COVID-19
misinformation
age differences
WhatsApp
corrective information
infodemic
credibility
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