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Crowds Can Effectively Identify Misinformation at Scale.

Cameron MartelJennifer AllenGordon PennycookDavid G Rand
Published in: Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science (2023)
Identifying successful approaches for reducing the belief and spread of online misinformation is of great importance. Social media companies currently rely largely on professional fact-checking as their primary mechanism for identifying falsehoods. However, professional fact-checking has notable limitations regarding coverage and speed. In this article, we summarize research suggesting that the "wisdom of crowds" can be harnessed successfully to help identify misinformation at scale. Despite potential concerns about the abilities of laypeople to assess information quality, recent evidence demonstrates that aggregating judgments of groups of laypeople, or crowds, can effectively identify low-quality news sources and inaccurate news posts: Crowd ratings are strongly correlated with fact-checker ratings across a variety of studies using different designs, stimulus sets, and subject pools. We connect these experimental findings with recent attempts to deploy crowdsourced fact-checking in the field, and we close with recommendations and future directions for translating crowdsourced ratings into effective interventions.
Keyphrases
  • social media
  • health information
  • physical activity
  • quality improvement
  • risk assessment
  • affordable care act
  • health insurance