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Original Artikel |
Journal |
Datum |
Titel |
Autoren Max. 6 Autoren |
1 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2024―Jun―20 |
Attitudes towards COVID-19 vaccines may have “spilled over” to other, unrelated vaccines along party lines in the United States |
Mark LaCour, Zebulon Bell |
2 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2023―Okt―03 |
Assessing misinformation recall and accuracy perceptions: Evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic |
Sarah E. Kreps, Douglas L. Kriner |
3 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2023―Jun―12 |
Support for “doing your own research” is associated with COVID-19 misperceptions and scientific mistrust |
Sedona Chinn, Ariel Hasell |
4 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2022―Jul―12 |
Cognitive reflection is associated with greater truth discernment for COVID-19 headlines, less trust but greater use of formal information sources, and greater willingness to pay for masks among social media users in Pakistan |
Ayesha Ali, Ihsan Ayyub Qazi |
5 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2022―Mrz―30 |
Partisan reasoning in a high stakes environment: Assessing partisan informational gaps on COVID-19 |
Erik Peterson, Shanto Iyengar |
6 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2022―Mrz―02 |
Ridiculing the “tinfoil hats:” Citizen responses to COVID-19 misinformation in the Danish facemask debate on Twitter |
Nicklas Johansen, Sara Vera Marjanovic, Cathrine Valentin Kjaer, Rebekah Brita Baglini, Rebecca Adler-Nissen |
7 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2022―Feb―16 |
Leveraging infodemiologists to counteract online misinformation: Experience with COVID-19 vaccines |
Jack M. Gorman, David A. Scales |
8 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Dez―15 |
Research note: Examining how various social media platforms have responded to COVID-19 misinformation |
Nandita Krishnan, Jiayan Gu, Rebekah Tromble, Lorien C. Abroms |
9 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Sep―17 |
Research note: Understanding offline Covid-19 conspiracy theories: A content analysis of The Light “truthpaper” |
Rod Dacombe, Nicole Souter, Lumi Westerlund |
10 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Sep―09 |
Happiness and surprise are associated with worse truth discernment of COVID-19 headlines among social media users in Nigeria |
Leah R. Rosenzweig, Bence Bago, Adam J. Berinsky, David G. Rand |
11 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Sep―09 |
The battleground of COVID-19 vaccine misinformation on Facebook: Fact checkers vs. misinformation spreaders |
Aimei Yang, Jieun Shin, Alvin Zhou, Ke M. Huang-Isherwood, Eugene Lee, Chuqing Dong, Hye Min Kim, Yafei Zhang, Jingyi Sun, Yiqi Li, Yuanfeixue Nan, Lichen Zhen, Wenlin Liu |
12 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Mai―18 |
Developing an accuracy-prompt toolkit to reduce COVID-19 misinformation online |
Ziv Epstein, Adam J. Berinsky, Rocky Cole, Andrew Gully, Gordon Pennycook, David G. Rand |
13 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Mrz―08 |
COVID-19 disinformation and political engagement among communities of color: The role of media literacy |
Erica Weintraub Austin, Porismita Borah, Shawn Domgaard |
14 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Mrz―03 |
COVID-19 misinformation and the 2020 U.S. presidential election |
Emily Chen, Herbert Chang, Ashwin Rao, Kristina Lerman, Geoffrey Cowan, Emilio Ferrara |
15 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2021―Jan―29 |
Research note: Bolsonaro’s firehose: How Covid-19 disinformation on WhatsApp was used to fight a government political crisis in Brazil |
Felipe Bonow Soares, Raquel Recuero, Taiane Volcan, Giane Fagundes, Giéle Sodré |
16 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Dez―09 |
Conspiracy and debunking narratives about COVID-19 origins on Chinese social media: How it started and who is to blame |
Kaiping Chen, Anfan Chen, Jingwen Zhang, Jingbo Meng, Cuihua Shen |
17 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Nov―11 |
The different forms of COVID-19 misinformation and their consequences |
Adam M. Enders, Joseph E. Uscinski, Casey Klofstad, Justin Stoler |
18 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Okt―22 |
Overcoming resistance to COVID-19 vaccine adoption: How affective dispositions shape views of science and medicine |
John E. Newhagen, Erik P. Bucy |
19 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Okt―09 |
The Twitter origins and evolution of the COVID-19 “plandemic” conspiracy theory |
Matthew D. Kearney, Shawn C. Chiang, Philip M. Massey |
20 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Sep―25 |
The weaponization of web archives: Data craft and COVID-19 publics |
Amelia Acker, Mitch Chaiet |
21 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Sep―17 |
Anger contributes to the spread of COVID-19 misinformation |
Jiyoung Han, Meeyoung Cha, Wonjae Lee |
22 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Sep―09 |
Not just conspiracy theories: Vaccine opponents and proponents add to the COVID-19 ‘infodemic’ on Twitter |
Amelia M. Jamison, David A. Broniatowski, Mark Dredze, Anu Sangraula, Michael C. Smith, Sandra C. Quinn |
23 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Sep―04 |
Misinformation more likely to use non-specific authority references: Twitter analysis of two COVID-19 myths |
Joseph McGlynn, Maxim Baryshevtsev, Zane A. Dayton |
24 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Aug―31 |
Ambiguity in authenticity of top-level Coronavirus-related domains |
Nathanael Tombs, Eleonore Fournier-Tombs |
25 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Aug―17 |
The spread of COVID-19 conspiracy theories on social me-dia and the effect of content moderation |
Orestis Papakyriakopoulos, Juan Carlos Medina Serrano, Simon Hegelich |
26 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Jul―14 |
Meme factory cultures and content pivoting in Singapore and Malaysia during COVID-19 |
Crystal Abidin |
27 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Jul―07 |
Ibuprofen Narratives in Five European Countries During the COVID-19 Pandemic |
Sergi Xaudiera, Ana S. Cardenal |
28 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Jun―18 |
The causes and consequences of COVID-19 misperceptions: Understanding the role of news and social media |
Aengus Bridgman, Eric Merkley, Peter John Loewen, Taylor Owen, Derek Ruths, Lisa Teichmann, Oleg Zhilin |
29 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Jun―15 |
Promoting health literacy during the COVID-19 pandemic: a call to action for healthcare professionals |
April Joy Damian, Joseph J. Gallo |
30 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Jun―08 |
Pandemics & Propaganda: How Chinese State Media Creates and Propagates CCP Coronavirus Narratives |
Vanessa Molter, Renee DiResta |
31 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Mai―31 |
Feeling “disinformed” lowers compliance with COVID-19 guidelines: Evidence from the US, UK, Netherlands and Germany |
Michael Hameleers, Toni G. L. A. van der Meer, Anna Brosius |
32 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Mai―28 |
Blame is in the Eye of the Beholder: Beyond an ethics of hubris and shame in the time of COVID-19 |
Annalisa Pelizza |
33 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Mai―20 |
Leveraging volunteer fact checking to identify misinformation about COVID-19 in social media |
Hyunuk Kim, Dylan Walker |
34 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Mai―12 |
Signs of a new world order: Italy as the COVID-19 disinformation battlefield |
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35 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Mai―12 |
Signs of a new world order: Italy as the COVID-19 disinformation battlefield |
Costanza Sciubba Caniglia |
36 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Mai―11 |
How search engines disseminate information about COVID-19 and why they should do better |
Mykola Makhortykh, Aleksandra Urman, Roberto Ulloa |
37 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Apr―28 |
Why do people believe COVID-19 conspiracy theories? |
Joseph E. Uscinski, Adam M. Enders, Casey Klofstad, Michelle Seelig, John Funchion, Caleb Everett, Stephan Wuchty, Kamal Premaratne, Manohar Murthi |
38 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Apr―17 |
USING MISINFORMATION AS A POLITICAL WEAPON:
COVID-19 AND BOLSONARO IN BRAZIL |
Julie Ricard, Juliano Medeiros |
39 |
[GO] |
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review |
2020―Apr―16 |
The Relation between Media Consumption and Misinformation
at the Outset of the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic in the US |
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Dolores Albarracín |