The Disaster of Misinformation: A Review of Research in Social Media

Researchers from the Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India, tracked 28 news stories and studied the inter-relationships and strategies to control the spread of misinformation on social media in three key subject area – politics, health and natural disasters, including the 2019-20 “Black Summer” bushfires in Australia.

Sadiq Muhammed and Saji K. Mathew
Department of Management Studies, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India


Abstract

The spread of misinformation in social media has become a severe threat to public interests. For example, several incidents of public health concerns arose out of social media misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic. Against the backdrop of the emerging IS research focus on social media and the impact of misinformation during recent events such as the COVID-19, Australian Bushfire, and the USA elections, we identified disaster, health, and politics as specific domains for a research review on social media misinformation.

Following a systematic review process, we chose 28 articles, relevant to the three themes, for synthesis. We discuss the characteristics of misinformation in the three domains, the methodologies that have been used by researchers, and the theories used to study misinformation. We adapt an Antecedents-Misinformation-Outcomes (AMIO) framework for integrating key concepts from prior studies. Based on the AMIO framework, we further discuss the inter-relationships of concepts and the strategies to control the spread of misinformation on social media. Ours is one of the early reviews focusing on social media misinformation research, particularly on three socially sensitive domains; disaster, health, and politics. This review contributes to the emerging body of knowledge in Data Science and social media and informs strategies to combat social media misinformation. READ THE FULL REPORT

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