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Email Drives Political Rumors, Not The Web Print E-mail
Nation - Politics
TS-Si News Service   
Tuesday, 08 March 2011 10:00
Columbus, OH, USA. Despite the fears of some, a new study suggests that use of the internet in general does not make people more likely to believe political rumors. However, one form of internet communication — email — does seem to have troubling consequences for the spread and belief of rumors.

“I think a lot of people will be surprised to learn that using the internet doesn’t necessarily promote belief in rumors. Many people seem to think that’s self-evident,” said R. Kelly Garrett, author of the study and assistant professor of communication at Ohio State University (OSU). “The internet does make it easier to circulate rumors, but going online doesn’t make us more gullible.”

However, email is a special case. People are much more likely to believe false rumors that they receive in emails from friends and family. People seem to be wary about rumors they read on websites and blogs, Garrett said. They are more likely to check these rumors to see if they are correct.

600 Americans were surveyed by telephone in November 2008, immediately after the presidential election

Participants were asked about their exposure to 10 rumors that were circulating about the two major presidential tickets, Obama-Biden and McCain-Palin.

The rumors included two true statements and eight patently false statements.

The falsehoods were rejected by both presidential candidates and by FactCheck.org and other major fact-checking organizations. Some of the false statements included such rumors as:

“Barack Obama is a Muslim”

“While serving as the Mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, Sarah Palin successfully banned several books from the local library.”
“The problem is that we are more likely to let our defenses down when we’re dealing with our friends, which is why email can have such harmful consequences. We don’t normally question what our friends tell us,” Garrett said. His findings appear in the journal Human Communication Research.

Results showed that
  • Use of the internet and online sources of political information did indeed lead people to encounter more rumors about the candidates.

  • The more rumors someone heard, the more they believed. In fact, for every two additional rumors that a person heard, the average number of rumors believed increased by about one.

  • People were also more likely to see rebuttals to the rumors online, as well.

In the end, the overall internet use had very little effect on the number of rumors someone believed.

However, it was when Garrett separated the various online sources of political news that he found each source had different types of influence. For example, results showed that the use of voter information websites and the websites of major news organizations was not linked to rumor exposure. However, use of political blogs and email from friends and family was linked to seeing more rumors.

The use of email led to a particularly vicious feedback loop of rumor-mongering.
  • The more political emails that participants received from friends and family during the 2008 election, the more rumors they were likely to believe. And the more rumors they believed, the more political emails they sent.

  • In addition, receiving emails only promoted belief in rumors about the candidate whom the person opposed, the study found. And people were more likely to share emails as belief in rumors about the opposed candidate increased.

“It is a self-reinforcing process that seems to amplify rumor beliefs through repetition,” Garrett said. “We have people who are biased to accept the rumors they receive from friends, which leads them to forward the email to other friends, who repeat the process over and over again.” All of this contributes to the survival of rumors, despite the overwhelming evidence against them, and helps fuel the partisan divide in the country, he said.

Garrett noted that this study didn’t include specific investigation of Facebook and Twitter, which have exploded in popularity in recent years. But he said both of these are social networks that allow us to communicate directly with friends, much like we do with email. “It seems reasonable to expect that the same characteristics that make email so conducive to spreading rumors apply to both Facebook and Twitter, as well,” he said.

Garrett said he believes that, overall, the results offer a mixed bag for those who worry about the effect of the internet on the spread of rumors. “It could have been worse,” he said. “While the effect of email is troubling, there are plenty of people who encounter rumors on the web every day and dismiss them.”

FundingThe research was supported by the National Science Foundation.
CitationTroubling Consequences of Online Political Rumoring. R. Kelly Garrett. Human Communication Research 2011; 37(2): 255-274. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2958.2010.01401.x

Abstract

Fear that the Internet promotes harmful political rumoring is merited but not for reasons originally anticipated. Although the network accelerates and widens rumor circulation, on the whole, it does not increase recipient credulity. email, however, which fosters informal political communication within existing social networks, poses a unique threat to factual political knowledge. A national telephone survey conducted immediately after the 2008 U.S. presidential election provides evidence that aggregate Internet use promotes exposure to both rumors and their rebuttals, but that the total effect on rumor beliefs is negligible. More troublingly, the data demonstrate that rumors emailed to friends/family are more likely to be believed and shared with others and that these patterns of circulation and belief exhibit strong political biases.

Keywords: elections, presidency, politics, rumors, internet, mediation, polarization.

TS-Si News ServiceThe TS-Si News Service is a collaborative effort by TS-Si.org editors, contributors, and corresponding institutions. The sources can include the cited individuals and organizations, as well as TS-Si.org staff contributions. Articles and news reports do not necessarily convey official positions of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 March 2011 09:45
 
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