How do climate change skeptics engage with opposing views? Understanding mechanisms of social identity and cognitive dissonance in an online forum
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12 February 2021
The project’s latest research on politicized information and the 2016 US election was covered in Mother Jones.
Millions of tweets were flying furiously in the final days leading up to the 2016 US presidential election. And in closely fought battleground states that would prove key to Donald Trump’s victory, they were more likely than elsewhere in America to be spreading links to fake news and hyperpoliticized content from Russian sources and WikiLeaks, according to new research published Thursday by Oxford University.
Nationwide during this period, one polarizing story was typically shared on average for every one story produced by a professional news organization. However, fake news from Twitter reached higher concentrations than the national average in 27 states, 12 of which were swing states—including Pennsylvania, Florida and Michigan, where Trump won by slim margins.
Read the full article here.
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12 February 2021
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13 January 2021
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28 October 2020
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27 October 2020