When are Fact-Checks Effective? An Experimental Study on the Inclusion of the Misinformation Source and the Source of Fact-Checks in 16 European Countries

Abstract

Despite increasing academic attention, several questions about fact-checking remain unanswered. First, it remains unclear to what extent fact-checks are effective across different political and media contexts. Second, we know little on whether features of the fact-check itself influence its success. Conducting an experiment in 16 European countries, this study aims to fill these gaps by examining two features of fact-checks that may affect their success: whether fact-checks include the political source of the misinformation, and the source of the fact-check itself. We find that fact-checks are successful in debunking misperceptions. Moreover, this debunking effect is consistent across countries. Looking at features of fact-checks, we find no indication that it matters whether fact-checks include the political source of the misinformation claim. Comparing fact-checks from independent organizations with those from public broadcasters, we do find, however, that who the fact-checker is matters, especially in combination with trust in this source.

Description

This is an open access article under the CC BY 4.0 license, available at: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15205436.2024.2321542#abstract The author Nicoleta Corbu is affiliated to SNSPA, of the College of Communication and Public Relations of the National University of Political Studies and Public Administration.

Keywords

Misinformation, Fact-checking, Media and communication studies

Citation

Van Erkel, P. F. A., Van Aelst, P., De Vreese, C. H., Hopmann, D. N., Matthes, J., Stanyer, J., & Corbu, N. (2024). When are Fact-Checks Effective? An Experimental Study on the Inclusion of the Misinformation Source and the Source of Fact-Checks in 16 European Countries. Mass Communication & Society, 27(5), 851–876. https://doi.org/10.1080/15205436.2024.2321542