Department of Marketing, Columbia Business School, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027.
Department of Marketing, Columbia Business School, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Jun 6;114(23):5976-5981. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1700175114. Epub 2017 May 22.
Today's media landscape affords people access to richer information than ever before, with many individuals opting to consume content through social channels rather than traditional news sources. Although people frequent social platforms for a variety of reasons, we understand little about the consequences of encountering new information in these contexts, particularly with respect to how content is scrutinized. This research tests how perceiving the presence of others (as on social media platforms) affects the way that individuals evaluate information-in particular, the extent to which they verify ambiguous claims. Eight experiments using incentivized real effort tasks found that people are less likely to fact-check statements when they feel that they are evaluating them in the presence of others compared with when they are evaluating them alone. Inducing vigilance immediately before evaluation increased fact-checking under social settings.
如今的媒体环境让人们能够接触到比以往任何时候都更丰富的信息,许多人选择通过社交渠道而不是传统新闻来源来获取内容。尽管人们出于各种原因频繁使用社交平台,但我们对在这些环境中遇到新信息的后果知之甚少,特别是对内容的审查方式知之甚少。这项研究检验了感知他人的存在(如在社交媒体平台上)如何影响个人评估信息的方式,特别是他们验证模糊主张的程度。八项使用激励真实努力任务的实验发现,与单独评估相比,当人们觉得自己在他人面前评估信息时,他们不太可能对陈述进行事实核查。在评估之前立即引起警惕会增加社交环境下的事实核查。