A recent study shows that online content moderators can become victims of misinformation due to the “illusory truth effect.” 

Psychology Today explains it’s people’s tendency to believe a frequently repeated statement, regardless of whether it’s true or not.

READ: Google AI research says AI may distort reality

Article continues after this advertisement

The researchers conducted their study in India and the Philippines. Consequently, they found that a false headline could raise the likelihood of belief by 7.1%.

FEATURED STORIES TECHNOLOGY DOST develops eco-friendly mulch for sustainable farming TECHNOLOGY Online content moderators can fall for misinformation – study TECHNOLOGY Pokemon GO company uses player data for training AI map models How did the researchers study online content moderators?

These individuals may be surprisingly susceptible to misinformation due to an "illusory truth effect," new research shows. https://t.co/dyzDe2KkbN

— The Debrief (@Debriefmedia) November 22, 2024

Online content moderators are the hundreds of thousands worldwide who review content before it appears online. 

Users typically aren’t aware of their existence. Nevertheless, they ensure the content aligns with the policies of Silicon Valley companies.

Article continues after this advertisement

These tech firms usually offshore this work to non-Western countries like the Philippines, where educated workers are available for a fraction of the price. 

Article continues after this advertisement

They serve as arbiters of truth worldwide, but they’re still humans who are susceptible to cognitive biases. 

Article continues after this advertisement

That is why MIT and Cornell researcher Hause Lin and his team studied two of the largest BPO countries: India and the Philippines.

The team worked with TaskUs, a global outsourcing company that specializes in content moderation, to conduct the study.

Article continues after this advertisement

The researchers started by asking TaskUs employees to rate specific headlines for interest. Then, they provided a questionnaire as a distraction.

Afterward, the researchers showed 48 headlines to the participants and asked them to rate the truthfulness.

They found that Indian and Filipino respondents were more likely to rate false headlines as true if they appeared twice.

Later, Lin and his colleagues studied a larger sample from the general public. They asked the respondents to check the accuracy of the headline instead of the interest the material generates.

The volunteers were more likely to judge repeated headlines correctly. As a result, they learned that an “accuracy-first mindset” is an effective way to fight misinformation.

Companies may train their online content moderators to adopt this technique to avoid the illusory truth effect. 

The general public should also be more vigilant in fighting misinformation.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again. Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

SIGN ME UP

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Learn how to spot fake news from this guide.hawkplay

TOPICS: technology READ NEXT Pokemon GO company uses player data for training AI map models DOST develops eco-friendly mulch for sustainable farming EDITORS' PICK EDITORIAL: Addressing the text scam scourge House contempt power under scrutiny Año: Threat to Marcos matter of nat’l security Storm Bert bring widespread flooding in Britain Estrada: Senate majority has final say on OVP budget hike Marcos names caretakers for UAE trip; VP Duterte sidelined MOST READ Lawyer pushes BARMM elections Four OVP execs cited for contempt show up at House hearing Threat against Marcos 'maliciously taken out context' – VP Sara Duterte Marcos names caretakers for UAE trip; VP Duterte sidelined Follow @FMangosingINQ on Twitter --> View comments


Hot News

Related News



Powered by Golden Palasyo-golden palasyo casino-golden palasyo Official website @2013-2022 RSS地图 HTML地图