Analysis of misinformation during the COVID-19 outbreak in China:
cultural, social and political entanglements
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.10414v1
- Date: Thu, 21 May 2020 01:34:08 GMT
- Title: Analysis of misinformation during the COVID-19 outbreak in China:
cultural, social and political entanglements
- Authors: Yan Leng, Yujia Zhai, Shaojing Sun, Yifei Wu, Jordan Selzer, Sharon
Strover, Julia Fensel, Alex Pentland, Ying Ding
- Abstract summary: COVID-19 resulted in an infodemic, which could erode public trust, impede virus containment, and outlive the pandemic itself.
The evolving and fragmented media landscape is a key driver of the spread of misinformation.
Our findings shed light on the distinct characteristics of misinformation during the COVID-19 and offer insights into combating misinformation in China and across the world at large.
- Score: 6.256108383411306
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: COVID-19 resulted in an infodemic, which could erode public trust, impede
virus containment, and outlive the pandemic itself. The evolving and fragmented
media landscape is a key driver of the spread of misinformation. Using
misinformation identified by the fact-checking platform by Tencent and posts on
Weibo, our results showed that the evolution of misinformation follows an
issue-attention cycle, pertaining to topics such as city lockdown, cures, and
preventions, and school reopening. Sources of authority weigh in on these
topics, but their influence is complicated by peoples' pre-existing beliefs and
cultural practices. Finally, social media has a complicated relationship with
established or legacy media systems. Sometimes they reinforce each other, but
in general, social media may have a topic cycle of its own making. Our findings
shed light on the distinct characteristics of misinformation during the
COVID-19 and offer insights into combating misinformation in China and across
the world at large.
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