Misinformation effects in an online sample: results of an experimental study with a five day retention interval

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Date

2021-11-18

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PeerJ Inc

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(c) The author/s
CC BY 4.0

Abstract

Traditional face-to-face laboratory studies have contributed greatly to our understanding of how misinformation effects develop. However, an area of emerging concern that has been relatively under-researched is the impact of misinformation following exposure to traumatic events that are viewed online. Here we describe a novel method for investigating misinformation effects in an online context. Participants (N = 99) completed the study online. They first watched a 10-min video of a fictional school shooting. Between 5 and 10 days later, they were randomly assigned to receive misinformation or no misinformation about the video before completing a recognition test. Misinformed participants were less accurate at discriminating between misinformation and true statements than control participants. This effect was most strongly supported by ROC analyses (Cohen’s d = 0.59, BF10 = 8.34). Misinformation effects can be established in an online experiment using candid violent viral-style video stimuli.

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Keywords

Decision making, False memory, Misinformation effect, Online study, ROC analysis, Traumatic memory

Citation

Sievwright O, Philipp M, Drummond A, Knapp K, Ross K. (2021). Misinformation effects in an online sample: results of an experimental study with a five day retention interval.. PeerJ. 9. (pp. e12299-).

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as (c) The author/s