Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions

In mass media, the positions of science deniers and scientific-consensus advocates are repeatedly presented in a balanced manner. This false balance increases the spread of misinformation under the guise of objectivity. Weight-of-evidence strategies are an alternative, in which journalists lend weig...

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Main Authors: Philipp Schmid, Marius Schwarzer, Cornelia Betsch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journalofcognition.org/articles/125
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spelling doaj-9022454baa634c8f80915f87f7e5ef122020-11-25T04:03:11ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Cognition2514-48202020-10-013110.5334/joc.125141Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public DiscussionsPhilipp Schmid0Marius Schwarzer1Cornelia Betsch2CEREB – Center of Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioral Sciences, University of Erfurt, Erfurt; Department of Psychology, University of Erfurt, ErfurtDepartment of Media and Communication Science, University of Erfurt, ErfurtCEREB – Center of Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioral Sciences, University of Erfurt, Erfurt; Department of Media and Communication Science, University of Erfurt, ErfurtIn mass media, the positions of science deniers and scientific-consensus advocates are repeatedly presented in a balanced manner. This false balance increases the spread of misinformation under the guise of objectivity. Weight-of-evidence strategies are an alternative, in which journalists lend weight to each position that is equivalent to the amount of evidence that supports the position. In public discussions, journalists can invite more advocates of scientific consensuses than science deniers (outnumbering) or they can employ warnings about the false-balance effect prior to the discussions (forewarning). In three pre-registered laboratory experiments, we tested the efficacy of outnumbering and forewarning as weight-of-evidence strategies to mitigate science deniers’ influence on individuals’ attitudes towards vaccination and their intention to vaccinate. We explored whether advocates’ responses to science deniers (rebuttal) and audiences’ issue involvement moderate the efficacy of these strategies. A total of 'N' = 887 individuals indicated their attitudes towards vaccination and their intention to vaccinate before and after watching a television (TV) discussion. The presence and absence of forewarning, outnumbering and rebuttal were manipulated between subjects; participants also indicated their individual issue involvement. We obtained no evidence that outnumbering mitigates damage from denialism, even when advocates served as multiple sources. However, forewarning about the false-balance effect mitigated deniers’ negative effects. Moreover, the protective effect was independent of rebuttal and issue involvement. Thus, forewarnings can serve as an effective, economic and theory-driven strategy to counter science denialism in public discussions, at least for highly educated individuals such as university students.https://www.journalofcognition.org/articles/125false-balance effectscience denialismforewarningmultiple-source effectrebuttalweight of evidencevaccination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philipp Schmid
Marius Schwarzer
Cornelia Betsch
spellingShingle Philipp Schmid
Marius Schwarzer
Cornelia Betsch
Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions
Journal of Cognition
false-balance effect
science denialism
forewarning
multiple-source effect
rebuttal
weight of evidence
vaccination
author_facet Philipp Schmid
Marius Schwarzer
Cornelia Betsch
author_sort Philipp Schmid
title Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions
title_short Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions
title_full Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions
title_fullStr Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions
title_full_unstemmed Weight-of-Evidence Strategies to Mitigate the Influence of Messages of Science Denialism in Public Discussions
title_sort weight-of-evidence strategies to mitigate the influence of messages of science denialism in public discussions
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Cognition
issn 2514-4820
publishDate 2020-10-01
description In mass media, the positions of science deniers and scientific-consensus advocates are repeatedly presented in a balanced manner. This false balance increases the spread of misinformation under the guise of objectivity. Weight-of-evidence strategies are an alternative, in which journalists lend weight to each position that is equivalent to the amount of evidence that supports the position. In public discussions, journalists can invite more advocates of scientific consensuses than science deniers (outnumbering) or they can employ warnings about the false-balance effect prior to the discussions (forewarning). In three pre-registered laboratory experiments, we tested the efficacy of outnumbering and forewarning as weight-of-evidence strategies to mitigate science deniers’ influence on individuals’ attitudes towards vaccination and their intention to vaccinate. We explored whether advocates’ responses to science deniers (rebuttal) and audiences’ issue involvement moderate the efficacy of these strategies. A total of 'N' = 887 individuals indicated their attitudes towards vaccination and their intention to vaccinate before and after watching a television (TV) discussion. The presence and absence of forewarning, outnumbering and rebuttal were manipulated between subjects; participants also indicated their individual issue involvement. We obtained no evidence that outnumbering mitigates damage from denialism, even when advocates served as multiple sources. However, forewarning about the false-balance effect mitigated deniers’ negative effects. Moreover, the protective effect was independent of rebuttal and issue involvement. Thus, forewarnings can serve as an effective, economic and theory-driven strategy to counter science denialism in public discussions, at least for highly educated individuals such as university students.
topic false-balance effect
science denialism
forewarning
multiple-source effect
rebuttal
weight of evidence
vaccination
url https://www.journalofcognition.org/articles/125
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