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On the Efficacy of Accuracy Prompts Across Partisan Lines: An Adversarial Collaboration.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


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Abstract

The spread of misinformation is a pressing societal challenge. Prior work shows that shifting attention to accuracy increases the quality of people's news-sharing decisions. However, researchers disagree on whether accuracy-prompt interventions work for U.S. Republicans/conservatives and whether partisanship moderates the effect. In this preregistered adversarial collaboration, we tested this question using a multiverse meta-analysis (k = 21; N = 27,828). In all 70 models, accuracy prompts improved sharing discernment among Republicans/conservatives. We observed significant partisan moderation for single-headline "evaluation" treatments (a critical test for one research team) such that the effect was stronger among Democrats than Republicans. However, this moderation was not consistently robust across different operationalizations of ideology/partisanship, exclusion criteria, or treatment type. Overall, we observed significant partisan moderation in 50% of specifications (all of which were considered critical for the other team). We discuss the conditions under which moderation is observed and offer interpretations.

Description

Peer reviewed: True

Journal Title

Psychol Sci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0956-7976
1467-9280

Volume Title

35

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Sponsorship
national science foundation (174530)
Gates Cambridge Scholarship (OPP1144)
russell sage foundation (G-G-2110-33990)
John Templeton World Charity Foundation (TWCF-2023-31570)
alfred p. sloan foundation (2021-16891)
Templeton World Charity Foundation (TWCF-2022-30561)