Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 13, Pages 896: Breaking (Fake) News: No Personal Relevance Effect on Misinformation Vulnerability

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Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 13, Pages 896: Breaking (Fake) News: No Personal Relevance Effect on Misinformation Vulnerability

Behavioral Sciences doi: 10.3390/bs13110896

Authors: Francesco Ceccarini Pasquale Capuozzo Ilaria Colpizzi Corrado Caudek

The massive spread of fake news (FN) requires a better understanding of both risks and protective psychological factors underlying vulnerability to misinformation. Prior studies have mostly dealt with news that do not bear any direct personal relevance to participants. Here, we ask whether high-stakes news topics may decrease vulnerability to FN. Data were collected during the national lockdown in Italy (COVID-19 news) and one year later (political news). We compared truth discrimination and overall belief for true news (TN) and FN concerning COVID-19 and political topics. Our findings indicate that psychological risk and protective factors have similar effects on truth discrimination, regardless of whether the news topic is highly or minimally personally relevant. However, we found different effects of psychological factors on overall belief, for high and low personal relevance. These results suggest that, given a high level of cognitive dissonance, individuals tend to rely on proximal or emotional sources of information. In summary, our study underscores the importance of understanding the psychological factors that contribute to vulnerability to misinformation, particularly in high-stakes news contexts.

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