Misinformation Studies

Misinformation Studies

Challenges conventional electric vehicle myths by highlighting a car with an attached battery.
We're separating the facts about EVs from the fiction.
A vintage photo portraying a woman engaged in predictive processing while studying a document.
Your expectations form the way you experience the world.
a close up of a person holding a business card.
We do not need to pause AI research. But we do need a pause on the public release of these tools until we can determine how to deal with them.
a close up of a cell phone near a keyboard.
The biggest lingering question about GPT-4 isn't if it's going to destroy jobs or take over the world. Instead, it is this: Do we trust AI programmers to tell society what is true?
sentient AI
When someone attempts to make you afraid of something that hasn't happened instead of a true, present danger, suspect this nefarious ploy.
a painting of a man's face and a woman's head.
A new AI lie detector can dive into their hidden thoughts and reveal “what language models truly believe about the world.”
a roll of patriotic ribbon on a white surface.
Estonia has long been seen as a pioneer in digitizing the democratic process.
Intellectual humility demands that we examine our motivations for holding certain beliefs.
John Templeton Foundation
Woman sending Morse code using telegraph
Telegrams were the “Twitter of the 1850s and 1860s” — and they elicited the exact same overblown fears as Twitter does today.
A 1974 concept of a vacuum train
Skepticism is appropriate when gazing into the futurist's crystal ball.
Concluding that Damar Hamlin's cardiac arrest was caused by the COVID vaccine requires accepting highly improbable leaps of logic.
A vitamin that makes your body repellent to mosquitos sounds too good to be true, because it is.
People naturally judge fact from fiction in offline social settings, so why is it so hard online?
By exposing people to small doses of misinformation and encouraging them to develop resistance strategies, "prebunking" can fight fake news.
astronomy new era
If you want to share the truths about our Universe with others, don't fall into the trap of arguing with a misinformer. Do this instead.
Scientific journals, which are supposed to be the sacred scriptures of academia, are often full of shoddy research and misinformation.
politics memory
A new study shows that political partisans are more likely to remember things that didn't happen — as long as it fits their narrative.
truth bias
2mins
How to see through the lies that surround us.
thinking fast slow
People believe that slow and deliberative thinking is inherently superior to fast and intuitive thinking. The truth is more complicated.
John Templeton Foundation
synthetic media
AI-generated photos, also known as synthetic media, are being used to create fake experts and journalists to spread disinformation.
Moments of social anxiety around truth tend to be accompanied by similar “fool the eye” pop culture phenomena.
When actual people correct misinformation online, it can be as effective, if not more so, as when a social media company labels something as questionable.
A woman holding a loudspeaker at a protest.
The problems that Americans face are often too complex for fact-checking alone.
gpt-3
GPT-3, which features 175 billion parameters, just might fool you in a conversation.
Silhouettes of three people watching a screen.
In spreading politics, videos may not be much more persuasive than their text-based counterparts.
A man trading on two different laptops
Between fake vaccine passports and targeted supply chain attacks, things are only getting more risky.
metaverse
If used improperly, the metaverse could be more divisive than social media and an insidious threat to society and even reality itself.