The global spread of misinformation on spiders
Alejandro Barrales-Alcalá Diego; Arabesky Valeria; Barrion-Dupo Aimee Lynn; Benamú Marco Antonio; Bird Tharina L.; Bogomolova Maria; Cardoso Pedro; Chatzaki Maria; Cheng Ren-Chung; Chu Tien-Ai; Chuang Angela; Classen-Rodríguez Leticia M.; Dhiya’ulhaq Naufal Urfi; Drapeau Picard André-Philippe; El-Hennawy Hisham K.; Elverici Mert; Fukushima Caroline S.; Ganem Zeana; Gavish-Regev Efrat; Gonnye Naledi T.; Hacala Axel; Haddad Charles R.; Hesselberg Thomas; Into Thanakorn; Isaia Marco; Jayaraman Dharmaraj; Karuaera Nanguei; Khalap Kiran; Khalap Rajashree; Kim Dongyoung; Kioko Grace Mwende; Korhonen Tuuli; Kralj-Fišer Simona; Land Heidi; Lin Shou-Wang; Loboda Sarah; Lowe Elizabeth; Lubin Yael; Malumbres-Olarte Jagoba; Mammola Stefano; Martínez Alejandro; Mbo Zingisile; Miličić Marija; Nanni Veronica; Norma-Rashid Yusoff; Nwankwo Daniel; Painting Christina J.; Pang Aleck; Pantini Paolo; Pavlek Martina; Pearce Richard; Petcharad Booppa; Pétillon Julien; Raberahona Onjaherizo Christian; Russo Philip; Saarinen Joni A.; Scott Catherine.; Segura-Hernández Laura; Sentenská Lenka; Tian Ho Tammy Ai; Uhl Gabriele; Walker Leilani; Warui Charles M.; Wiśniewski Konrad; Zamani Alireza; Čupić Iva
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022091258639
Tiivistelmä
In the internet era, the digital architecture that keeps us connected and informed may also amplify the spread of misinformation. This problem is gaining global attention, as evidence accumulates that misinformation may interfere with democratic processes and undermine collective responses to environmental and health crises. In an increasingly polluted information ecosystem, understanding the factors underlying the generation and spread of misinformation is becoming a pressing scientific and societal challenge. Here, we studied the global spread of (mis-)information on spiders using a high-resolution global database of online newspaper articles on spider–human interactions, covering stories of spider–human encounters and biting events published from 2010–2020. We found that 47% of articles contained errors and 43% were sensationalist. Moreover, we show that the flow of spider-related news occurs within a highly interconnected global network and provide evidence that sensationalism is a key factor underlying the spread of misinformation.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]