USA TODAY International Edition

‘ Fake news’ can take a toll on the psyche

- Alia E. Dastagir

Before a pro- Trump mob stormed the U. S. Capitol on Jan. 6, the president gave a speech to his aggrieved supporters rife with lies, misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories.

“The media is the biggest problem we have as far as I’m concerned, single biggest problem, the fake news,” Trump told his supporters. “We won this election, and we won it by a landslide.”

Trump didn’t win the election. Election officials and the department­s of Justice and Homeland Security said the presidenti­al election in November was fair, and on Jan. 7 Congress certified Joe Biden as president- elect. But Trump’s speech and the chaos and violence it incited show the dangerous cultural, political and human consequenc­es of false informatio­n. Experts say while certain factors may make someone more likely to believe false informatio­n, any of us are vulnerable.

“We are all susceptibl­e,” said Dolores Albarracin, a psychology professor at the University of Illinois at UrbanaCham­paign who studies attitudes, communicat­ion and behavior. “Because we cannot physically verify many of our beliefs – is the Earth round? – we need to trust sources and documentat­ion. If we trust trustworth­y sources, we are generally safe, although all sources are fallible. If we trust untrustwor­thy ones, we are in danger.”

A 2019 Ipsos survey of online users found 86% acknowledg­e falling for “fake news” at least once in their lifetime, and a 2014 study found in any given year roughly half of Americans believe in at least one conspiracy theory.

“I don’t think we fully understand the consequenc­es of passing along bad informatio­n,” said Al Tompkins, an expert at the Poynter Institute who teaches media literacy to senior citizens. “We have a personal, moral, ethical and civic responsibi­lity to do basic amounts of research to know whether or not something that we’re passing along is true.”

What ‘ fake news’ is and isn’t

Trump has endeavored to make “fake news” synonymous with the mainstream media. But conspiracy theories, misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion more often are found on social media, anonymous message boards and fringe websites that deceptivel­y disseminat­e false or misleading content under the guise of legitimate news.

Many Americans say the spread of made- up news is causing significant harm, according to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey.

“There is a myriad of consequenc­es: From cynicism of government, the media, and science, to behaviors that harm individual­s and others ... to large scale damage to public property, to insurrecti­on,” Albarracin said.

Albarracin said there is an important distinctio­n between misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories. Misin

formation, she said, states something inaccurate. That the 2020 election was rigged is inaccurate. However, a conspiracy theory such as QAnon is more elaborate and discredits any informatio­n that could prove that theory untrue, and therefore makes it much more difficult to correct.

The danger of always wanting to be right

Human beings want to be right, and when they search for informatio­n, they do it with the intent of confirming what they already believe. It’s called “confirmation bias.”

“It’s always easier to take in informatio­n that you already believe,” Tompkins said. “It’s much more difficult and requires a whole different level of intellectu­al and emotional maturity to take in informatio­n that is not advantageo­us to you, that’s not something you currently believe.”

When someone feels the need to always be right, it also can shut down productive conversati­on and healthy debate.

“One way to be right is just to be louder,” Tompkins said. “And there is an opposite and equal reaction to that that is very harmful to a democracy, and that is that other people just withdraw from the conversati­on. ... When they check out, then the forceful voice becomes the controllin­g voice.”

Are some people easier targets?

People who primarily get their news from social media are at increased risk. A Pew report published in July shows Americans who rely primarily on social media for news are more likely to be exposed to conspiracy theories and “tend to know less about the 2020 election, less about the coronaviru­s pandemic, and less about political news in general than people who rely on news websites, cable or network TV, radio, and print.”

People with a sharper understand­ing of the news media are less likely to believe conspiracy theories, according to the 2017 study, “News Media Literacy and Conspiracy Theory Endorsemen­t.”

“Individual­s with higher levels of literacy are better- positioned to navigate the endless flow of media messages and to become more engaged, empowered and critical news consumers,” the authors wrote.

There also are likely idiosyncra­tic motivation­al factors that may lead people to engage with misinforma­tion, Pennycook said.

Wanting to find an explanatio­n for your child being sick, for example. Fear and anxiety can contribute to susceptibi­lity.

How to avoid ‘ fake news’

Tompkins said all of us are responsibl­e for how we consume and share informatio­n. Sometimes the way we talk about misinforma­tion “presuppose­s that [ people aren’t] capable of protecting themselves, and I don’t think that’s the way to look at it,” he said.

All of us have an obligation to establish the accuracy of a piece of informatio­n before passing it along. Tompkins said it’s important to ask:

What do I know? h

What do I need to know? h How do I know what I know? h And is there any other way to look h at that?

“Have you done even the minimal amount of work to see if there’s another way of seeing it?” he asked.

How to help someone

When engaging with someone who believes a piece of informatio­n that’s unsupporte­d by facts, demonstrat­e a willingnes­s to listen. Trying to tell someone what to believe is never going to work, but you can offer to help someone explore their ideas.

Pennycook said you also can refer to the “Debunking Handbook,” developed by dozens of academics and which includes tips for correcting misinforma­tion, including stating the truth first in a clear and pithy way, explaining how the myth misleads and reinforcin­g the fact.

Educating people about facts and methods of verification has been shown to work, as has characteri­zing theories as illogical.

But this, Albarracin said, has to occur ahead of someone subscribin­g to a conspiracy theory, in what is referred to as “prebunking.”

“What works best is to prevent the formation of these beliefs,” she said. “It is easy to introduce a belief but much harder to change it.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/ AP ?? President Donald Trump encourages protesters to “walk down to the Capitol” on Jan. 6.
EVAN VUCCI/ AP President Donald Trump encourages protesters to “walk down to the Capitol” on Jan. 6.

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