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Hauptverfasser: Pecho-Ninapaytan, Andrea, Zambrano-Zuta, Stefany, Vargas-Bianchi, Lizardo
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2021
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.12312
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author Pecho-Ninapaytan, Andrea
Zambrano-Zuta, Stefany
Vargas-Bianchi, Lizardo
author_facet Pecho-Ninapaytan, Andrea
Zambrano-Zuta, Stefany
Vargas-Bianchi, Lizardo
contents The spread of fake news has been increasing, which gives rise to a special interest in the development of identification and coping skills among news consumers so that they can filter out misleading information. Studies suggest that older people share more fake news from social media. There is scarce literature that analyse how baby boomers behave in the face of fake news. The purpose of this study is to examine how female baby boomers deal with fake news on Facebook and their available resources to learn how to identify and handle dubious information. A qualitative study and thematic analysis were conducted using information obtained from interviewing female baby boomers. Four themes emerge from the analysis, revealing that participants recognise that they can identify fake news but may not always be able to do so due to limitations in their understanding of an issue or uncertainty about its source. Participants show participants empirically develop critical identification and filtering skills with the assistance from close family members.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2107_12312
institution arXiv
publishDate 2021
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle 'No, auntie, that's false': Female baby boomers develop critical skills to confront fake news with guidance from relatives
Pecho-Ninapaytan, Andrea
Zambrano-Zuta, Stefany
Vargas-Bianchi, Lizardo
Computers and Society
The spread of fake news has been increasing, which gives rise to a special interest in the development of identification and coping skills among news consumers so that they can filter out misleading information. Studies suggest that older people share more fake news from social media. There is scarce literature that analyse how baby boomers behave in the face of fake news. The purpose of this study is to examine how female baby boomers deal with fake news on Facebook and their available resources to learn how to identify and handle dubious information. A qualitative study and thematic analysis were conducted using information obtained from interviewing female baby boomers. Four themes emerge from the analysis, revealing that participants recognise that they can identify fake news but may not always be able to do so due to limitations in their understanding of an issue or uncertainty about its source. Participants show participants empirically develop critical identification and filtering skills with the assistance from close family members.
title 'No, auntie, that's false': Female baby boomers develop critical skills to confront fake news with guidance from relatives
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.12312