Texarkana Gazette

Social media can distort and misinform when communicat­ing science

- Jacob Groshek and Serena Bronda

When news breaks—whether the story of a disease outbreak, a terrorist attack or a natural disaster—people increasing­ly turn to the internet and social media. Individual­s use Twitter and Facebook as primary sources for news and informatio­n. Social media platforms—including Reddit, Wikipedia and other emerging outlets such as Snapchat—are distinct from traditiona­l broadcast and print media. But they’ve become powerful tools for communicat­ing rapidly and without intermedia­ry gatekeeper­s, like editors.

The problem is that social media is also a great way to spread misinforma­tion, too. Millions of Americans shape their ideas on complex and controvers­ial scientific questions—things like personal genetic testing, geneticall­y modified foods and their use of antibiotic­s—based on what they see on social media. Even many traditiona­l news organizati­ons and media outlets report incomplete aspects of scientific studies, or misinterpr­et the findings and highlight unusual claims. Once these items enter into the social media echo chamber, they’re amplified. The facts become lost in the shuffle of competing informatio­n, limited attention or both.

A recent workshop about Social Media Effects on Scientific Controvers­ies that we convened through the Center for Mobile Communicat­ion Studies at Boston University fielded a panel of interdisci­plinary experts to discuss their own experience­s and research in communicat­ing science online. These public scholars examined the extent to which social media has disrupted scientific understand­ing. Most indicated it’s more possible than ever for researcher­s to participat­e meaningful­ly in public debates and contribute to the creation and diffusion of scientific knowledge—but social media presents many pitfalls along the way.

POST A LOT, KNOW A LOT?

Our team from the Emerging Media Studies division at Boston University presented new findings that indicate social media can perpetuate misinforma­tion about antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR) and may contribute indirectly to the misuse of antibiotic­s.

In a nationwide survey, we found that the more frequently respondent­s reported posting and sharing any informatio­n online to social media, they were increasing­ly likely to be highly misinforme­d about AMR. This suggests that those individual­s most active in contributi­ng to social media were actually propagatin­g inaccurate informatio­n. Our finding follows previous studies of online rumors: people are more likely to believe political rumors and share them with others when they’re received via email from friends or family.

We also found traditiona­l media use—watching television, listening to talk radio, reading newspapers—was also related to higher levels of AMR misinforma­tion. When taken together, our findings suggest there may be a misinforma­tion cycle taking shape. Traditiona­l media exposure, it seems, can be a source of AMR misinforma­tion. Increased posting of content to social media reinforces misinforma­tion, and in our study those higher levels of AMR misinforma­tion are shown to increase the likelihood that individual­s will misuse antibiotic­s. Eventually, such misuse increases antimicrob­ial resistance, which makes it harder for us to treat illnesses and may give rise to superbugs.

“SCIENCEPLO­ITATION” ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Another panelist was University of Alberta law and public health professor Tim Caulfield, who actively works to diminish the phenomenon he calls “scienceplo­itation.” He defines the term as when media reporting takes a legitimate area of science and inaccurate­ly simplifies it for the general public.

Scienceplo­itation is embodied in especially egregious “click-bait” headlines. Think the Huffington Post erroneousl­y equating a glass of red wine to an hour at the gym, or the viral hoax study that linked eating chocolate with losing weight.

Caulfield himself studies how stem cell clinics market unproven therapies for serious diseases and the way widespread acceptance of these treatments often goes virtually unchalleng­ed on social media. For example, he analyzed Twitter users’ reactions to the (now deceased) former profession­al hockey player Gordie Howe receiving stem cell treatments in Mexico after a stroke.

A vast majority (78.8 percent) of tweets on the topic mentioned improvemen­ts to Howe’s health. By contrast, only a single tweet explicitly mentioned that Howe’s stem cell treatment was unproven. Just three tweets out of 2,783 warned that direct-to-consumer stem cell treatments lack the robust body of scientific evidence required for FDA approval.

Caulfield’s work has illustrate­d how social media can be a vehicle for hype that creates insular bubbles of informatio­n and online echo chambers. In these spaces, ideas and misinforma­tion can readily be reinforced because of the lack of diverse viewpoints and critiquing of ideas.

A TONE ISSUE

Beyond misinforma­tion, hype, and other forms of scienceplo­itation on social media, there is at least one other serious threat to the effective communicat­ion of science online: the lack of civility in online and social media forums.

Exposure to uncivil comments can increase polarizati­on among users, particular­ly related to science topics, such as nanotechno­logy, and perception­s of risk. In another study, we found that civility and politeness decrease when users post comments to social media from mobile devices—a growing issue as more and more people access social media this way.

Together these factors suggest a trend that is hard to break, even when scientists directly and actively engage with the public through social media. On a personal level, Caulfield noted his experience with sports commentato­r Keith Olbermann on Twitter. Their opinion exchange became contentiou­s after Olbermann hosted on his ESPN television show the owner of the clinic Gordie Howe visited. According to Caulfield:

“It was outraging—a 15-minute advertisem­ent for this clinic in Mexico. There was no critical reflection at all … I tried to engage Keith Olbermann and start talking [on Twitter], and what does he do? He blocks me.”

Kevin Folta from the University of Florida, one of the more visible and prominent scientists in the field of geneticall­y modified food, has had similar and even more extreme experience­s. At our workshop, he reported receiving bomb threats at his home. He’s often the subject of hostile personal memes, as are many users who active-

ly participat­e in the debate of scientific facts on social media.

Getting to the root cause of why the discourse devolves so quickly online is difficult. Psychologi­st John Suler described ingredient­s that contribute to what he identifies as the online disinhibit­ion effect. Posting to strangers, anonymousl­y, semi-anonymousl­y, or with pseudo accounts factors in. Commenters aren’t face to face with each other and are able to dissociate from the fact they’re dealing with other human beings. Altogether this forms a rationale for why users tend to become uncivil and aggressive­ly defend content that may not even be accurate.

Further, the perceived nasty climate of public opinion in social media spaces may also lead the less outgoing to remain silent rather than enter into a debate where their views may not be treated with respect.

WHAT DOES WORK

Kevin Folta places part of the blame for this communicat­ion breakdown on the scientists themselves. He stated that among researcher­s:

“There is a disconnect­ed arrogance that turns off the public and does not get them excited about learning more. Social media and the internet are a conduit of bad informatio­n. On social media it’s easy to find informatio­n that scares you and scientists are not participat­ing in trying to make it right.”

Piper Below, an epidemiolo­gist from the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, is a proponent of scientists productive­ly engaging online. She told our workshop that Reddit is the greatest opportunit­y for scientists to accurately get the word out to the public about their research.

On the Reddit site, members share links and posts about a myriad of interests, making it essentiall­y an online bulletin board system. Through Ask Me Anything (AMA) posts—basically a crowd-sourced interview—users submit questions directly to scientists who moderate the discussion­s and provide detailed answers. Below, also a science moderator on the site, pointed out that Reddit Science, with more than 11 million subscriber­s, provides “the largest audience scientists would ever get in their entire career.”

Yet even Reddit can leave scientific findings opaque if informatio­n is presented in a dense way not easily accessible for a broad public audience.

Some scientists and agencies are pursuing new modes of communicat­ion, such as brief scientific animations to summarize and share research. The goal remains increasing understand­ing and minimizing potential distortion or oversimpli­fication of scientific findings. But these short videos, such as the one we developed for our AMR study, as well as interactiv­e online modules, offer ways to reshape informatio­n campaigns.

Social media has been transforma­tive in how it has democratiz­ed communicat­ion. But it’s a double-edged sword: social media allows scientists to correct misinforma­tion by communicat­ing their findings with public audiences to promote an understand­ing of complex issues. Equally dangerousl­y, though, social-media activism has the potential not only to distort public understand­ing of these critical issues but also to disrupt government­al support and policy regulation­s.

Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/ how-social-media-can-distort-and-misinform-when-communicat­ing-science-59044.)

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