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News credibility labels have limited average effects on news diet quality and fail to reduce misperceptions
Political ScienceScience Advances

News credibility labels have limited average effects on news diet quality and fail to reduce misperceptions

K. Aslett, A. M. Guess, et al.

An ecologically valid randomized field experiment tested source-credibility labels in social feeds and search, finding no average change in low-quality news consumption after three weeks but suggestive improvements among the heaviest misinformation consumers — research was conducted by Kevin Aslett, Andrew M. Guess, Richard Bonneau, Jonathan Nagler, and Joshua A. Tucker.... show more
Abstract
As the primary arena for viral misinformation shifts toward transnational threats, the search continues for scalable countermeasures compatible with principles of transparency and free expression. We conducted a randomized field experiment evaluating the impact of source credibility labels embedded in users' social feeds and search results pages. By combining representative surveys (n = 3337) and digital trace data (n = 968) from a subset of respondents, we provide a rare ecologically valid test of such an intervention on both attitudes and behavior. On average across the sample, we are unable to detect changes in real-world consumption of news from low-quality sources after 3 weeks. We can also rule out small effects on perceived accuracy of popular misinformation spread about the Black Lives Matter movement and coronavirus disease 2019. However, we present suggestive evidence of a substantively meaningful increase in news diet quality among the heaviest consumers of misinformation. We discuss the implications of our findings for scholars and practitioners.
Publisher
Science Advances
Published On
May 06, 2022
Authors
Kevin Aslett, Andrew M. Guess, Richard Bonneau, Jonathan Nagler, Joshua A. Tucker
Tags
misinformationsource credibility labelsrandomized field experimentnews consumptiondigital trace dataperceived accuracyBlack Lives Matter
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