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Combating Misinformation Through Nudging

Published: 02 September 2019 Publication History

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that the spread and consumption of misinformation online can be attributed to errors in human decision making, facilitated by cognitive biases. The field of Behavioral Economics has contributed a repertoire of such cognitive biases that can be leveraged for the design of technological interventions. In particular, the concept of nudging refers to subtle changes in the ‘choice architecture’ that can alter people’s behaviors in predictable ways. In this paper we present our ongoing work on the design of nudging interventions in the context of misinformation, including a systematic review of the use of nudging in HCI that has led to a design framework consisting of 23 mechanisms of nudging tapping to 15 different cognitive biases, the translation of this framework into a set of design cards, the Nudge Deck, and its use in a planned workshop that aims to explore the design space of misinformation in the context of nudging.

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Caraban, A., Gonçalves, D., Karapanos, E., Campos, P.: 23 ways to nudge: a review of technology-mediated nudging in human-computer interaction. In: Proceedings of CHI 2019, pp. 1–15 (2019)
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Cited By

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  • (2024)Everything We Hear: Towards Tackling Misinformation in PodcastsProceedings of the 26th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction10.1145/3678957.3678959(596-601)Online publication date: 4-Nov-2024

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    Published In

    cover image Guide Proceedings
    Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2019: 17th IFIP TC 13 International Conference, Paphos, Cyprus, September 2–6, 2019, Proceedings, Part IV
    Sep 2019
    780 pages
    ISBN:978-3-030-29389-5
    DOI:10.1007/978-3-030-29390-1

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    Springer-Verlag

    Berlin, Heidelberg

    Publication History

    Published: 02 September 2019

    Author Tags

    1. Behavior change
    2. Misinformation
    3. Nudging

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    • (2024)Everything We Hear: Towards Tackling Misinformation in PodcastsProceedings of the 26th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction10.1145/3678957.3678959(596-601)Online publication date: 4-Nov-2024

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