CPAS Seminar

PhD Oral Presentation

Thursday 11 May, PhD Researcher Matt Nurse will be presenting about misinformation.

schedule Date & time
Date/time
11 May 2023 12:00pm - 11 May 2023 1:00pm
person Speaker

Speakers

Matt Nurse
next_week Event series

Event series

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Cost

Free, just bring your lunch. 

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Description

PH.D. ORAL PRESENTATION!

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Powerpoint slide cover.

About the talk --  Who shares COVID-19 misinformation in Australia: A science communication approach

During the COVID-19 pandemic, many Australians encountered false information about the disease and the virus that caused it. This misinformation was often spread by other Australians without knowing, or perhaps caring, whether these claims were true or not. Many of these messages contained suggestions that would be harmful if adopted. Within the academic community and across public health agencies, there is now heightened urgency to understand why some people engage in sharing this potentially harmful information. Previous research has found that personal factors, like attitudes, worldviews or a tendency to avoid analytic thinking, are associated with individual differences in misinformation-sharing behaviour. However, there is an intense academic debate about which of these factors are the most powerful predictors and for whom. Much of this debate has focused on social media, on topics of politics, rather than topics of science, and has focused on other national contexts. This means that the predictors for sharing misinformation about COVID-19 in Australia through any communication channel are currently unknown. This thesis contributes to this debate in the context of COVID-19 in Australia. It finds the first evidence for the integrative account for misinformation-sharing behaviour, building on previous findings that established this account for the forming of misinformation beliefs. This integrative account suggests that an individual’s tendency to engage in analytic thinking predicts their willingness to share misinformation, but this tendency is secondary to sharing information that is congruent with personal attitudes. While political orientation traditionally forms this preference component of the integrative model for political topics, this thesis finds that conspiratorial ideation about COVID-19 is instead the most useful predictor for this topic of science. This was found both at an individual level and through an audience segmentation analysis of a quota-matched national sample. Science communication professionals may be able to use these findings to develop effective and well-targeted communication strategies and other responses aimed at discouraging the spread of false and harmful information during future infectious disease emergencies.

Research profile: https://cpas.anu.edu.au/people/matt-nurse 
Twitter: @matt_nurse

Location

1.30 Green couch room, Peter Baume Building 42a, Acton ACT 2601

To join virtually, please reach out to Abigail Hils (cpas@anu.edu.au) or use this information below to join:

Zoom Link: https://anu.zoom.us/j/85475374932?pwd=aUNNdmFkK2pnK01UaGRzcEJDSjU3Zz09
Passcode: CPASsem23

-35.275637687401, 149.11759302653