Hindustan Times (Delhi)

False news travels faster than truth on Twitter as humans more likely to spread it

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NEW YORK: False news on politics travels farther, faster, deeper and more broadly than the truth on Twitter because humans, not robots, are more likely to spread it, finds a study led by three Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology scholars.

The researcher­s also settled on the term “false news” as their object of study, as distinct from the now ubiquitous term “fake news”, which involves multiple broad meanings. “Twitter became our main source of news,” said Soroush Vosoughi, a postdoctor­al student at the varsity.

The team analysed roughly 126,000 stories tweeted by three million people more than 4.5 million times. Falsehoods were 70 per cent more likely to be retweeted than the truth. It also takes true stories about six times as long to reach 1,500 people as it does for false stories to reach the same number of people. When it comes to Twitter’s “cascades”, or unbroken retweet chains, falsehoods reach a cascade depth of 10 about 20 times faster than facts. TORONTO: Humans are addicted to continuous social interactio­n, and not to their smartphone devices, a study of dysfunctio­nal use of smart technology has found.

The findings, published in Frontiers in Psychology, suggest that smartphone addiction could be hyper-social, not anti-social.

“There is a lot of panic surroundin­g this topic. We’re trying to offer some good news and show that it is our desire for human interactio­n that is addictive — and there are fairly simple solutions to deal with this,” said Samuel Veissiere, from Mcgill University in Canada.

We all know people who, seemingly incapable of living without the bright screen of their phone for more than a few minutes, are constantly texting and checking out what friends are up to on social media. These are examples of what many consider to be the antisocial behaviour brought on by smartphone addiction, a phenomenon that has garnered media attention in the past few months and led investors and consumers to demand that tech giants address this problem.

Veissiere said that the desire to watch and monitor others — but also to be seen and monitored by others — runs deep in our evolutiona­ry past.

Humans evolved to be a uniquely social species and require constant input from others to seek a guide for culturally appropriat­e behaviour.

This is also a way for them to find meaning, goals, and a sense of identity.

Researcher­s reviewed current literature on dysfunctio­nal use of smart technology through an evolutiona­ry lens.

They found that the most addictive smartphone functions all shared a common theme: They tap into the human desire to connect with other people.

While smartphone­s harness a normal and healthy need for sociality, Veissiere agrees that the pace and scale of hyperconne­ctivity pushes the brain’s reward system to run on overdrive, which can lead to unhealthy addictions. Turning off push notificati­ons and setting up appropriat­e times to check your phone can go a long way to regain control over smartphone addiction. Research suggests that workplace policies “that prohibit evening and weekend emails” are also important.

“Rather than start regulating the tech companies or the use of these devices, we need to start having a conversati­on about the appropriat­e way to use smartphone­s,” said Veissiere.

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