Roozenbeek & Van der Linden (2018). The fake news game: Actively inoculating against the risk of misinformation. - Article summary
Many people believe they can differentiate between actual news and fake news, although a small minority can actually do this. The spread of misinformation (i.e. fake news) has the potential to undermine science and society (e.g. democracy).
The inoculation theory states that by pre-emptively exposing people to a weakened version of an argument and subsequently refuting that argument, attitudinal resistance can be conferred against future persuasion attempts. In the case of fake news, this means that people are exposed to weak fake news which is then refuted in order to make people more ‘immune’ to other forms of fake news. In the theory, threat refers to the recognition that one’s attitude on an issue is vulnerable to attack. Refutational pre-emption refers to providing people with specific arguments to help resist persuasion attempts.
It appears to be effective when people are presented with both the arguments and the refutation. However, it may be more effective to use active refutation because internal counter-arguing is a more involved cognitive process.
The studies that showed the effectiveness of the theory used refutational-same schemes where people are inoculated against specific information to which they will be exposed later on. Refutational-different schemes refers to a format where the message refutes challenges that are not specifically featured in a subsequent attack.
It is possible that active inoculation reduces the perceived reliability and persuasiveness of previously unseen fake news articles.
Active inoculation reduces perceived reliability and persuasiveness of fake news articles. The active generation of counter-arguments elicits greater affect. This indicates higher engagement which is a key component of resistance. Early media education might be a viable method of inoculation to help empower people against the risk of disinformation.
Join with a free account for more service, or become a member for full access to exclusives and extra support of WorldSupporter >>
Concept of JoHo WorldSupporter
JoHo WorldSupporter mission and vision:
- JoHo wants to enable people and organizations to develop and work better together, and thereby contribute to a tolerant tolerant and sustainable world. Through physical and online platforms, it support personal development and promote international cooperation is encouraged.
JoHo concept:
- As a JoHo donor, member or insured, you provide support to the JoHo objectives. JoHo then supports you with tools, coaching and benefits in the areas of personal development and international activities.
- JoHo's core services include: study support, competence development, coaching and insurance mediation when departure abroad.
Join JoHo WorldSupporter!
for a modest and sustainable investment in yourself, and a valued contribution to what JoHo stands for
- 1520 keer gelezen
Psychology and the New Media - Article Summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
- 2407 keer gelezen
Psychology and the New Media - Course summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
- 2291 keer gelezen
Psychology and the New Media - Article Summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
- Bartels & Herman (2019). Media research: Is violent media making us more aggressive? - Article summary
- Brewer (2011). Media violence. - Article summary
- Giles (2010). History of the mass media. - Article summary
- Behm-Morawitz & Ortiz (2013).” Race, ethnicity, and the media. - Article summary
- Heath (2011). Portrayal of crime. - Article summary
- Scharrer (2013). Representations of gender in the media. - Article summary
- Nabi & Moyer-Guse (2013). The psychology underlying media-based persuasion. - Article summary
- Roozenbeek & Van der Linden (2018). The fake news game: Actively inoculating against the risk of misinformation. - Article summary
- Shrum & Lee (2012). The stories TV tells: How fictional TV narratives shape normative perceptions and personal values. - Article summary
- Finkel et al. (2012). Online dating: A critical analysis from the perspective of psychological science - Article summary
- Malamuth, Linz, & Weber (2013). The internet and aggression: Motivation, disinhibitory, and opportunity aspects. - Article summary
- Nguyen, Bin, & Campbell (2012). Comparing online and offline self-disclosure: A systematic review. - Article summary
- Rieger (2017). Between surveillance and sexting. - Article summary
- Acquisiti, Brandenmarten, & Loewenstein (2015).” Privacy and human behavior in the age of information. - Article summary
- Amichai-Hamburger & Hayat (2013). “Internet and personality. - Article summary
- Segovia & Bailenson (2013). Identity manipulation: What happens when identity presentation is not truthful. - Article summary
- Toma & Hancock (2013). Self-affirmation underlies Facebook use. - Article summary
- Adjerdid & Kelly (2018). Big data in psychology: A framework research advancement. - Article summary
- Boyd & Crawford (2012). Critical questions for big data. - Article summary
- DeStefano & LeFevre (2007). Cognitive load in hypertext reading: A review. - Article summary
- Sparrow & Chatman (2013). Social cognition in the internet age: Same as it ever was? - Article summary
- Blumberg et al. (2013). Serious games: What are they? What do they do? Why should we play them? - Article summary
- Klimmt & Brand (2017). Permanence of online access and internet addiction. - Article summary
- Wallace (2015). Game mechanics and human behavior. - Article summary
- Wallace (2015). The internet as a time sink. - Article summary
Work for JoHo WorldSupporter?
Volunteering: WorldSupporter moderators and Summary Supporters
Volunteering: Share your summaries or study notes
Student jobs: Part-time work as study assistant in Leiden

Contributions: posts
Psychology and the New Media - Article Summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
This bundle contains a summary of all the articles for the course "Psychology and the New Media" given at the "University of Amsterdam". It includes the following articles:
- “Bartels & Herman (2019). Media research: Is
Search only via club, country, goal, study, topic or sector











Add new contribution