Outrage facilitates the spread of misinformation on social networks

According to a study published in Science, social media content containing misinformation provokes more moral outrage than content containing accurate information, and this outrage facilitates the spread of misinformation. In addition, the results also showed that people are more likely to share this outrage-provoking misinformation without reading it first. 

28/11/2024 - 20:00 CET
Expert reactions

Ramón Salaverría - indignación

Ramón Salaverría

Professor of Journalism at the University of Navarra and coordinator of Iberifier (Iberian Digital Media Observatory).

Science Media Centre Spain

This study confirms with strong empirical evidence the hypothesis that emotions play a key role in the processes of public dissemination of misinformation. Moreover, it is very novel because it finds that indignation is specifically the key emotion in the activation of the processes of social dissemination of misinformation. 

The author has declared they have no conflicts of interest
EN
Publications
Misinformation exploits outrage to spread online
  • Research article
  • Peer reviewed
Journal
Science
Publication date
Authors

McLoughlin et al. 

Study types:
  • Research article
  • Peer reviewed
The 5Ws +1
Publish it
FAQ
Contact