Study shows audience
judgments can identify online misinformation
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
Would you like to rid
the internet of false political news stories and misinformation? Then consider
using -- yes -- crowdsourcing.
That's right. A new
study co-authored by an MIT professor shows that crowdsourced judgments about
the quality of news sources may effectively marginalize false news stories and
other kinds of online misinformation.
"What we found is
that, while there are real disagreements among Democrats and Republicans
concerning mainstream news outlets, basically everybody -- Democrats,
Republicans, and professional fact-checkers -- agree that the fake and
hyperpartisan sites are not to be trusted," says David Rand, an MIT
scholar and co-author of a new paper detailing the study's results.
Indeed, using a pair
of public-opinion surveys to evaluate of 60 news sources, the researchers found
that Democrats trusted mainstream media outlets more than Republicans do --
with the exception of Fox News, which Republicans trusted far more than
Democrats did.
But when it comes to lesser-known sites peddling false information, as well as "hyperpartisan" political websites (the researchers include Breitbart and Daily Kos in this category), both Democrats and Republicans show a similar disregard for such sources.
Trust levels for these alternative sites were low overall. For instance, in one survey, when respondents were asked to give a trust rating from 1 to 5 for news outlets, the result was that hyperpartisan websites received a trust rating of only 1.8 from both Republicans and Democrats; fake news sites received a trust rating of only 1.7 from Republicans and 1.9 from Democrats.
By contrast, mainstream media outlets received a trust rating of 2.9 from Democrats but only 2.3 from Republicans; Fox News, however, received a trust rating of 3.2 from Republicans, compared to 2.4 from Democrats.
But when it comes to lesser-known sites peddling false information, as well as "hyperpartisan" political websites (the researchers include Breitbart and Daily Kos in this category), both Democrats and Republicans show a similar disregard for such sources.
Trust levels for these alternative sites were low overall. For instance, in one survey, when respondents were asked to give a trust rating from 1 to 5 for news outlets, the result was that hyperpartisan websites received a trust rating of only 1.8 from both Republicans and Democrats; fake news sites received a trust rating of only 1.7 from Republicans and 1.9 from Democrats.
By contrast, mainstream media outlets received a trust rating of 2.9 from Democrats but only 2.3 from Republicans; Fox News, however, received a trust rating of 3.2 from Republicans, compared to 2.4 from Democrats.
The study adds a twist
to a high-profile issue. False news stories have proliferated online in recent
years, and social media sites such as Facebook have received sharp criticism
for giving them visibility.
Facebook also faced pushback for a January 2018 plan to let readers rate the quality of online news sources. But the current study suggests such a crowdsourcing approach could work well, if implemented correctly.
Facebook also faced pushback for a January 2018 plan to let readers rate the quality of online news sources. But the current study suggests such a crowdsourcing approach could work well, if implemented correctly.
"If the goal is
to remove really bad content, this actually seems quite promising," Rand
says.
The paper,
"Fighting misinformation on social media using crowdsourced judgments of
news source quality," is being published in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. The authors are Gordon Pennycook of the
University of Regina, and Rand, an associate professor in the MIT Sloan School
of Management.
To promote, or to
squelch?
To perform the study,
the researchers conducted two online surveys that had roughly 1,000
participants each, one on Amazon's Mechanical Turk platform, and one via the
survey tool Lucid. In each case, respondents were asked to rate their trust in
60 news outlets, about a third of which were high-profile, mainstream sources.
The second survey's
participants had demographic characteristics resembling that of the country as
a whole -- including partisan affiliation. (The researchers weighted
Republicans and Democrats equally in the survey to avoid any perception of
bias.)
That survey also measured the general audience's evaluations against a set of judgments by professional fact-checkers, to see whether the larger audience's judgments were similar to the opinions of experienced researchers.
That survey also measured the general audience's evaluations against a set of judgments by professional fact-checkers, to see whether the larger audience's judgments were similar to the opinions of experienced researchers.
But while Democrats
and Republicans regarded prominent news outlets differently, that party-based
mismatch largely vanished when it came to the other kinds of news sites, where,
as Rand says, "By and large we did not find that people were really
blinded by their partisanship."
In this vein,
Republicans trusted MSNBC more than Breitbart, even though many of them
regarded it as a left-leaning news channel. Meanwhile, Democrats, although they
trusted Fox News less than any other mainstream news source, trusted it more
than left-leaning hyperpartisan outlets (such as Daily Kos).
Moreover, because the
respondents generally distrusted the more marginal websites, there was
significant agreement among the general audience and the professional
fact-checkers. (As the authors point out, this also challenges claims about
fact-checkers having strong political biases themselves.)
That means the crowdsourcing approach could work especially well in marginalizing false news stories -- for instance by building audience judgments into an algorithm ranking stories by quality. Crowdsourcing would probably be less effective, however, if a social media site were trying to build a consensus about the very best news sources and stories.
Where Facebook failed:
Familiarity?
If the new study by
Rand and Pennycook rehabilitates the idea of crowdsourcing news source
judgments, their approach differs from Facebook's stated 2018 plan in one
crucial respect. Facebook was only going to let readers who were familiar with
a given news source give trust ratings.
But Rand and Pennycook
conclude that this method would indeed build bias into the system, because
people are more skeptical of news sources they have less familiarity with --
and there is likely good reason why most people are not acquainted with many
sites that run fake or hyperpartisan news.
"The people who are familiar with fake news outlets are, by and large, the people who like fake news," Rand says. "Those are not the people that you want to be asking whether they trust it."
Thus for crowdsourced
judgments to be a part of an online ranking algorithm, there might have to be a
mechanism for using the judgments of audience members who are unfamiliar with a
given source. Or, better yet, suggest, Pennycook and Rand, showing users sample
content from each news outlet before having the users produce trust ratings.
For his part, Rand
acknowledges one limit to the overall generalizability of the study: The
dymanics could be different in countries that have more limited traditions of
freedom of the press.
"Our results
pertain to the U.S., and we don't have any sense of how this will generalize to
other countries, where the fake news problem is more serious than it is
here," Rand says.
All told, Rand says,
he also hopes the study will help people look at America's fake news problem
with something less than total despair.
"When people talk
about fake news and misinformation, they almost always have very grim
conversations about how everything is terrible," Rand says. "But a
lot of the work Gord [Pennycook] and I have been doing has turned out to
produce a much more optimistic take on things."