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What's Real About Fake News? A Limited Capacity Approach to Studying Online Deception Comprehension in Media Multitasking Situations.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
What's Real About Fake News? A Limited Capacity Approach to Studying Online Deception Comprehension in Media Multitasking Situations./
作者:
Lynch, Kristen.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2021,
面頁冊數:
186 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-06, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International83-06A.
標題:
Multimedia communications. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28774884
ISBN:
9798496513623
What's Real About Fake News? A Limited Capacity Approach to Studying Online Deception Comprehension in Media Multitasking Situations.
Lynch, Kristen.
What's Real About Fake News? A Limited Capacity Approach to Studying Online Deception Comprehension in Media Multitasking Situations.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2021 - 186 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-06, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Michigan State University, 2021.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Fake news, largely considered a social media problem (Tandoc, Jenkins, & Craft), can lead to misinformed judgments in important, vital areas, such as healthcare and political processes, or to misguided actions related to responses to deceptive information (Fourney, Racz, Ranade, Mobius, & Horvitz, 2017; Tandoc, 2019). The current health circumstances (i.e., COVID-19 Pandemic) require accurate and immediate news to inform the public about the situation, how to proceed as a community, and how to best protect themselves (e.g., helping them answer questions such as: "Should I wear a mask?", "Should I stay home?", or "Will receiving the COVID-19 vaccine cause a miscarriage?"). To date, there has been much misinformation about the spread of COVID-19, how communities should react, and the correct precautions individuals should take in order to stay healthy and safe (Suciu, 2020). Another impeding force is the increased use of mobile devices is changing the way messages are being processed. Of U.S. adults, 77% own a laptop, 58% have a tablet computer, and 91% own a smartphone (Hilton, 2018). Consequently, media usage behaviors, such as multitasking with several devices, have become widespread (Collins, 2008; Jeong & Hwang, 2012). This study examines the effects of media multitasking on falsity detection in an online experiment with a Qualtrics panel of gen pop (N = 186) where half the sample media multitasked while reading both real and fake news posts and the other half were asked to read real and fake news posts. Results indicated that organic media multitasking behaviors, outside of the experimental procedure, such talking to a spouse or a child or texting on the phone to a friend and media multitasking preferences may be a better indicators of cognitive processing and behavioral intentions in an online media multitasking experiment than manipulating multitasking.
ISBN: 9798496513623Subjects--Topical Terms:
590562
Multimedia communications.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Cognitive load
What's Real About Fake News? A Limited Capacity Approach to Studying Online Deception Comprehension in Media Multitasking Situations.
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Fake news, largely considered a social media problem (Tandoc, Jenkins, & Craft), can lead to misinformed judgments in important, vital areas, such as healthcare and political processes, or to misguided actions related to responses to deceptive information (Fourney, Racz, Ranade, Mobius, & Horvitz, 2017; Tandoc, 2019). The current health circumstances (i.e., COVID-19 Pandemic) require accurate and immediate news to inform the public about the situation, how to proceed as a community, and how to best protect themselves (e.g., helping them answer questions such as: "Should I wear a mask?", "Should I stay home?", or "Will receiving the COVID-19 vaccine cause a miscarriage?"). To date, there has been much misinformation about the spread of COVID-19, how communities should react, and the correct precautions individuals should take in order to stay healthy and safe (Suciu, 2020). Another impeding force is the increased use of mobile devices is changing the way messages are being processed. Of U.S. adults, 77% own a laptop, 58% have a tablet computer, and 91% own a smartphone (Hilton, 2018). Consequently, media usage behaviors, such as multitasking with several devices, have become widespread (Collins, 2008; Jeong & Hwang, 2012). This study examines the effects of media multitasking on falsity detection in an online experiment with a Qualtrics panel of gen pop (N = 186) where half the sample media multitasked while reading both real and fake news posts and the other half were asked to read real and fake news posts. Results indicated that organic media multitasking behaviors, outside of the experimental procedure, such talking to a spouse or a child or texting on the phone to a friend and media multitasking preferences may be a better indicators of cognitive processing and behavioral intentions in an online media multitasking experiment than manipulating multitasking.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28774884
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