Swire Briony, Berinsky Adam J, Lewandowsky Stephan, Ecker Ullrich K H
School of Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, E53-470, Cambridge, MA 20139USA; School of Psychological Science, University of Western Australia (M304), Perth 6009, Australia.
School of Political Science , Massachusetts Institute of Technology , 77 Massachusetts Avenue, E53-470, Cambridge, MA 20139 USA.
R Soc Open Sci. 2017 Mar 1;4(3):160802. doi: 10.1098/rsos.160802. eCollection 2017 Mar.
This study investigated the cognitive processing of true and false political information. Specifically, it examined the impact of source credibility on the assessment of veracity when information comes from a polarizing source (Experiment 1), and effectiveness of explanations when they come from one's own political party or an opposition party (Experiment 2). These experiments were conducted prior to the 2016 Presidential election. Participants rated their belief in factual and incorrect statements that President Trump made on the campaign trail; facts were subsequently affirmed and misinformation retracted. Participants then re-rated their belief immediately or after a delay. Experiment 1 found that (i) if information was attributed to Trump, Republican supporters of Trump believed it more than if it was presented without attribution, whereas the opposite was true for Democrats and (ii) although Trump supporters reduced their belief in misinformation items following a correction, they did not change their voting preferences. Experiment 2 revealed that the explanation's source had relatively little impact, and belief updating was more influenced by perceived credibility of the individual initially purporting the information. These findings suggest that people use political figures as a heuristic to guide evaluation of what is true or false, yet do not necessarily insist on veracity as a prerequisite for supporting political candidates.
本研究调查了对真假政治信息的认知处理。具体而言,它考察了来源可信度对信息来自极化来源时真实性评估的影响(实验1),以及当解释来自自己的政党或反对党时解释的有效性(实验2)。这些实验在2016年总统大选之前进行。参与者对特朗普在竞选活动中发表的事实性和错误陈述的可信度进行评分;随后事实得到证实,错误信息被撤回。参与者然后立即或在延迟后重新对他们的可信度进行评分。实验1发现:(i)如果信息归属于特朗普,特朗普的共和党支持者比无归属呈现时更相信它,而民主党人则相反;(ii)尽管特朗普的支持者在纠正错误信息后降低了对其的信任,但他们没有改变自己的投票偏好。实验2表明,解释的来源影响相对较小,信念更新更多地受到最初声称该信息的个人的可信度感知的影响。这些发现表明,人们将政治人物作为一种启发式方法来指导对真假的评估,但不一定坚持将真实性作为支持政治候选人的先决条件。