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Fact-checking is the process of verifying the factual accuracy of questioned reporting and statements. Fact-checking can be conducted before or after the text or content is published or otherwise disseminated. Internal fact-checking is such checking done in-house by the publisher to prevent inaccurate content from being published; when the text is analyzed by a third party, the process is called external fact-checking.
Research suggests that fact-checking can indeed correct perceptions among citizens, as well as discourage politicians from spreading false or misleading claims. However, corrections may decay over time or be overwhelmed by cues from elites who promote less accurate claims. Political fact-checking is sometimes criticized as being opinion journalism. A review of US politics fact-checkers shows a mixed result of whether fact-checking is an effective way to reduce misconceptions, and whether the method is reliable.
History of fact-checking
Sensationalist newspapers in the 1850s and later led to a gradual need for a more factual media. Colin Dickey has described the subsequent evolution of fact-checking. Key elements were the establishment of Associated Press in the 1850s (short factual material needed), Ralph Pulitzer of the New York World (his Bureau of Accuracy and Fair Play, 1912), Henry Luce and Time magazine (original working title: Facts), and the famous fact-checking department of The New Yorker. More recently[when?], the mainstream media has come under severe economic threat from online startups.[citation needed] In addition, the rapid spread of misinformation and conspiracy theories via social media is slowly creeping into mainstream media.[citation needed] One solution[according to whom?] is for more media staff to be assigned a fact-checking role, as for example The Washington Post.[citation needed] Independent fact-checking organisations have also become[when?] prominent, such as PolitiFact.[citation needed]
Types of fact-checking
Ante hoc fact-checking aims to identify errors so that the text can be corrected before dissemination, or perhaps rejected. Post hoc fact-checking is most often followed by a written report of inaccuracies, sometimes with a visual metric provided by the checking organization (e.g., Pinocchios from The Washington Post Fact Checker, or TRUTH-O-METER ratings from PolitiFact). Several organizations are devoted to post hoc fact-checking: examples include FactCheck.org and PolitiFact in the US, and Full Fact in the UK.
External post hoc fact-checking organizations first arose in the US in the early 2000s, and the concept grew in relevance and spread to various other countries during the 2010s.
Post hoc fact-checking
External post hoc fact-checking by independent organizations began in the United States in the early 2000s. In the 2010s, particularly following the 2016 election of Donald Trump as US President, fact-checking gained a rise in popularity and spread to multiple countries mostly in Europe and Latin America. However, the US remains the largest market for fact-checking.
Consistency across fact-checking organizations
One 2016 study finds that fact-checkers PolitiFact, FactCheck.org, and The Washington Post's Fact Checker overwhelmingly agree on their evaluations of claims. A 2018 paper found little overlap in the statements checked by different fact-checking organizations. This paper compared 1,178 published fact-checks from PolitiFact with 325 fact-checks from The Washington Post's Fact Checker, and found only 77 statements (about 5%) that both organizations checked. For those 77 statements, the fact-checking organizations gave the same ratings for 49 statements and similar ratings for 22, about 92% agreement.
Choice of which statements to check
Different fact-checking organizations have shown different tendencies in their choice of which statements they publish fact-checks about. For example, some are more likely to fact-check a statement about climate change being real, and others are more likely to fact-check a statement about climate change being fake.
Effects
Studies of post hoc fact-checking have made clear that such efforts often result in changes in the behavior, in general, of both the speaker (making them more careful in their pronouncements) and of the listener or reader (making them more discerning with regard to the factual accuracy of content); observations include the propensities of audiences to be completely unpersuaded by corrections to errors regarding the most divisive subjects, or the tendency to be more greatly persuaded by corrections of negative reporting (e.g., "attack ads"), and to see minds changed only when the individual in error was someone reasonably like-minded to begin with.
Correcting misperceptions
Studies have shown that fact-checking can affect citizens' belief in the accuracy of claims made in political advertisement. A 2020 study by Paris School of Economics and Sciences Po economists found that falsehoods by Marine Le Pen during the 2017 French presidential election campaign (i) successfully persuaded voters, (ii) lost their persuasiveness when fact-checked, and (iii) did not reduce voters' political support for Le Pen when her claims were fact-checked. A 2017 study in the Journal of Politics found that "individuals consistently update political beliefs in the appropriate direction, even on facts that have clear implications for political party reputations, though they do so cautiously and with some bias... Interestingly, those who identify with one of the political parties are no more biased or cautious than pure independents in their learning, conditional on initial beliefs."
A study by Yale University cognitive scientists Gordon Pennycook and David G. Rand found that Facebook tags of fake articles "did significantly reduce their perceived accuracy relative to a control without tags, but only modestly". A Dartmouth study led by Brendan Nyhan found that Facebook tags had a greater impact than the Yale study found. A "disputed" tag on a false headline reduced the number of respondents who considered the headline accurate from 29% to 19%, whereas a "rated false" tag pushed the number down to 16%. A 2019 study found that the "disputed" tag reduced Facebook users' intentions to share a fake news story. The Yale study found evidence of a backfire effect among Trump supporters younger than 26 years whereby the presence of both untagged and tagged fake articles made the untagged fake articles appear more accurate. In response to research which questioned the effectiveness of the Facebook "disputed" tags, Facebook decided to drop the tags in December 2017 and would instead put articles which fact-checked a fake news story next to the fake news story link whenever it is shared on Facebook.
Based on the findings of a 2017 study in the journal Psychological Science, the most effective ways to reduce misinformation through corrections is by:
- limiting detailed descriptions of / or arguments in favor of the misinformation;
- walking through the reasons why a piece of misinformation is false rather than just labelling it false;
- presenting new and credible information which allows readers to update their knowledge of events and understand why they developed an inaccurate understanding in the first place;
- using video, as videos appear to be more effective than text at increasing attention and reducing confusion, making videos more effective at correcting misperception than text.
Large studies by Ethan Porter and Thomas J. Wood found that misinformation propagated by Donald Trump was more difficult to dispel with the same techniques, and generated the following recommendations:
- Highly credible sources are the most effective, especially those which surprisingly report facts against their own perceived bias
- Reframing the issue by adding context can be more effective than simply labeling it as incorrect or unproven.
- Challenging readers' identity or worldview reduces effectiveness.
- Fact-checking immediately is more effective, before false ideas have spread widely.
A 2019 meta-analysis of research into the effects of fact-checking on misinformation found that fact-checking has substantial positive impacts on political beliefs, but that this impact weakened when fact-checkers used "truth scales", refuted only parts of a claim and when they fact-checked campaign-related statements. Individuals' preexisting beliefs, ideology, and knowledge affected to what extent the fact-checking had an impact. A 2019 study in the Journal of Experimental Political Science found "strong evidence that citizens are willing to accept corrections to fake news, regardless of their ideology and the content of the fake stories."
A 2018 study found that Republicans were more likely to correct their false information on voter fraud if the correction came from Breitbart News rather than a non-partisan neutral source such as PolitiFact. A 2022 study found that individuals exposed to a fact-check of a false statement by a far-right politician were less likely to share the false statement.
Some studies have found that exposure to fact-checks had durable effects on reducing misperceptions, whereas other studies have found no effects.
Scholars have debated whether fact-checking could lead to a "backfire effect" whereby correcting false information may make partisan individuals cling more strongly to their views. One study found evidence of such a "backfire effect", but several other studies did not.
Political discourse
A 2015 experimental study found that fact-checking can encourage politicians to not spread misinformation. The study found that it might help improve political discourse by increasing the reputational costs or risks of spreading misinformation for political elites. The researchers sent, "a series of letters about the risks to their reputation and electoral security if they were caught making questionable statements. The legislators who were sent these letters were substantially less likely to receive a negative fact-checking rating or to have their accuracy questioned publicly, suggesting that fact-checking can reduce inaccuracy when it poses a salient threat."
Fact-checking may also encourage some politicians to engage in "strategic ambiguity" in their statements, which "may impede the fact-checking movement's goals."
Political preferences
One experimental study found that fact-checking during debates affected viewers' assessment of the candidates' debate performance and "greater willingness to vote for a candidate when the fact-check indicates that the candidate is being honest."
A study of Trump supporters during the 2016 presidential campaign found that while fact-checks of false claims made by Trump reduced his supporters' belief in the false claims in question, the corrections did not alter their attitudes towards Trump.
A 2019 study found that "summary fact-checking", where the fact-checker summarizes how many false statements a politician has made, has a greater impact on reducing support for a politician than fact-checking of individual statements made by the politician.
Informal fact-checking
Individual readers perform some types of fact-checking, such as comparing claims in one news story against claims in another.
Rabbi Moshe Benovitz, has observed that: "modern students use their wireless worlds to augment skepticism and to reject dogma." He says this has positive implications for values development:
Fact-checking can become a learned skill, and technology can be harnessed in a way that makes it second nature... By finding opportunities to integrate technology into learning, students will automatically sense the beautiful blending of… their cyber… [and non-virtual worlds]. Instead of two spheres coexisting uneasily and warily orbiting one another, there is a valuable experience of synthesis....
According to Queen's University Belfast researcher Jennifer Rose, because fake news is created with the intention of misleading readers, online news consumers who attempt to fact-check the articles they read may incorrectly conclude that a fake news article is legitimate. Rose states, "A diligent online news consumer is likely at a pervasive risk of inferring truth from false premises" and suggests that fact-checking alone is not enough to reduce fake news consumption. Despite this, Rose asserts that fact-checking "ought to remain on educational agendas to help combat fake news".
Detecting fake news
The term fake news became popularized with the 2016 United States presidential election, causing concern among some that online media platforms were especially susceptible to disseminating disinformation and misinformation. Fake news articles tend to come from either satirical news websites or from websites with an incentive to propagate false information, either as clickbait or to serve a purpose. The language, specifically, is typically more inflammatory in fake news than real articles, in part because the purpose is to confuse and generate clicks. Furthermore, modeling techniques such as n-gram encodings and bag of words have served as other linguistic techniques to estimate the legitimacy of a news source. On top of that, researchers have determined that visual-based cues also play a factor in categorizing an article, specifically some features can be designed to assess if a picture was legitimate and provides us more clarity on the news. There is also many social context features that can play a role, as well as the model of spreading the news. Websites such as "Snopes" try to detect this information manually, while certain universities are trying to build mathematical models to assist in this work.
Some individuals and organizations publish their fact-checking efforts on the internet. These may have a special subject-matter focus, such as Snopes.com's focus on urban legends or the Reporters' Lab at Duke University's focus on providing resources to journalists.
Fake news and social media
The adaptation of social media as a legitimate and commonly used platform has created extensive concerns for fake news in this domain. The spread of fake news via social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram presents the opportunity for extremely negative effects on society therefore new fields of research regarding fake news detection on social media is gaining momentum. However, fake news detection on social media presents challenges that renders previous data mining and detection techniques inadequate. As such, researchers are calling for more work to be done regarding fake news as characterized against psychology and social theories and adapting existing data mining algorithms to apply to social media networks. Further, multiple scientific articles have been published urging the field further to find automatic ways in which fake news can be filtered out of social media timelines.
Methodology
Lateral reading, or getting a brief overview of a topic from lots of sources instead of digging deeply into one, is a popular method professional fact-checkers use to quickly get a better sense of the truth of a particular claim.
Digital tools and services commonly used by fact-checkers include, but are not limited to:
- Reverse image search engines (Google Images,TinEye,Bing Image Search,Baidu Image Search[improper synthesis?],Yandex Image Search[needs update])
- Archiving services (Internet Archive,Archive.today,Perma.cc)
- Encyclopedias (Wikipedia)
- Web analytics platforms (Similarweb)
- Image and video analysis tools (InVID, FotoForensics)
- Domain registration information (DomainTools, DomainBigData, WHOIS.com)
- General search engines (Google Search)
- Web mapping platforms (Google Maps,Google Street View,Google Earth,Yandex Maps[needs update])
- Social media monitoring platforms (CrowdTangle,[needs update]TweetDeck,[needs update]BuzzSumo[needs update])
Ongoing research in fact-checking and detecting fake news
Since the 2016 United States presidential election, fake news has been a popular topic of discussion by President Trump and news outlets. The reality of fake news had become omnipresent, and a lot of research has gone into understanding, identifying, and combating fake news. Also, a number of researchers began with the usage of fake news to influence the 2016 presidential campaign. One research found evidence of pro-Trump fake news being selectively targeted on conservatives and pro-Trump supporters in 2016. The researchers found that social media sites, Facebook in particular, to be powerful platforms to spread certain fake news to targeted groups to appeal to their sentiments during the 2016 presidential race. Additionally, researchers from Stanford, NYU, and NBER found evidence to show how engagement with fake news on Facebook and Twitter was high throughout 2016.
Recently, a lot of work has gone into helping detect and identify fake news through machine learning and artificial intelligence. In 2018, researchers at MIT's CSAIL created and tested a machine learning algorithm to identify false information by looking for common patterns, words, and symbols that typically appear in fake news. More so, they released an open-source data set with a large catalog of historical news sources with their veracity scores to encourage other researchers to explore and develop new methods and technologies for detecting fake news.[citation needed]
In 2022, researchers have also demonstrated the feasibility of falsity scores for popular and official figures by developing such for over 800 contemporary elites on Twitter as well as associated exposure scores.
There are also demonstrations of platform-built-in (by-design) as well browser-integrated (currently in the form of addons) misinformation mitigation. Efforts such as providing and viewing structured accuracy assessments on posts "are not currently supported by the platforms". Trust in the default or, in decentralized designs, user-selected providers of assessments (and their reliability) as well as the large quantities of posts and articles are two of the problems such approaches may face. Moreover, they cannot mitigate misinformation in chats, print-media and TV.
International Fact-Checking Day
The concept for International Fact-Checking Day was introduced at a conference for journalists and fact-checkers at the London School of Economics and Political Science in June 2014. The holiday was officially created in 2016 and first celebrated on April 2, 2017. The idea for International Fact-Checking day rose out of the many misinformation campaigns found on the internet, particularly social media sites. It rose in importance after the 2016 elections, which brought fake news, as well as accusations of it, to the forefront of media issues. The holiday is held on April 2 because "April 1 is a day for fools. April 2 is a day for facts." Activities for International Fact-Checking Day consist of various media organizations contributing to fact-checking resources, articles, and lessons for students and the general public to learn more about how to identify fake news and stop the spread of misinformation. 2020's International Fact-Checking Day focused specifically on how to accurately identify information about COVID-19.
Limitations and controversies
Research has shown that fact-checking has limits, and can even backfire, which is when a correction increases the their belief in the misconception. One reason is that it can be interpreted as an argument from authority, leading to resistance and hardening beliefs, "because identity and cultural positions cannot be disproved." In other words "while news articles can be fact-checked, personal beliefs cannot."
Critics argue that political fact-checking is increasingly used as opinion journalism. Criticism has included that fact-checking organizations in themselves are biased or that it is impossible to apply absolute terms such as "true" or "false" to inherently debatable claims. In September 2016, a Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey found that "just 29% of all Likely U.S. Voters trust media fact-checking of candidates' comments. Sixty-two percent (62%) believe instead that news organizations skew the facts to help candidates they support."
A paper by Andrew Guess (of Princeton University), Brendan Nyhan (Dartmouth College) and Jason Reifler (University of Exeter) found that consumers of fake news tended to have less favorable views of fact-checking, in particular Trump supporters. The paper found that fake news consumers rarely encountered fact-checks: "only about half of the Americans who visited a fake news website during the study period also saw any fact-check from one of the dedicated fact-checking website (14.0%)."
Deceptive websites that pose as fact-checkers have also been used to promote disinformation; this tactic has been used by both Russia and Turkey.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Facebook announced it would "remove false or debunked claims about the novel coronavirus which created a global pandemic", based on its fact-checking partners, collectively known as the International Fact-Checking Network. In 2021, Facebook reversed its ban on posts speculating the COVID-19 disease originated from Chinese labs, following developments in the investigations into the origin of COVID-19, including claims by the Biden administration, and a letter by eighteen scientists in the journal Science, saying a new investigation is needed because 'theories of accidental release from a lab and zoonotic spillover both remain viable." The policy led to an article by The New York Post that suggested a lab leak would be plausible to be initially labeled as "false information" on the platform. This reignited debates into the notion of scientific consensus. In an article published by the medical journal The BMJ, journalist Laurie Clarke said "The contentious nature of these decisions is partly down to how social media platforms define the slippery concepts of misinformation versus disinformation. This decision relies on the idea of a scientific consensus. But some scientists say that this smothers heterogeneous opinions, problematically reinforcing a misconception that science is a monolith." David Spiegelhalter, the Winton Professor of the Public Understanding of Risk at Cambridge University, argued that "behind closed doors, scientists spend the whole time arguing and deeply disagreeing on some fairly fundamental things". Clarke further argued that "The binary idea that scientific assertions are either correct or incorrect has fed into the divisiveness that has characterised the pandemic."
Several commentators have noted limitations of political post-hoc fact-checking. While interviewing Andrew Hart in 2019 about political fact-checking in the United States, Nima Shirazi and Adam Johnson discuss what they perceive as an unspoken conservative bias framed as neutrality in certain fact-checks, citing argument from authority, "hyper-literal ... scolding [of] people on the left who criticized the assumptions of American imperialism", rebuttals that may not be factual themselves, issues of general media bias, and "the near ubiquitous refusal to identify patterns, trends, and ... intent in politicians' ... false statements". They further argue that political fact-checking focuses exclusively on describing facts over making moral judgments (ex., the is–ought problem), assert that it relies on public reason to attempt to discredit public figures, and question its effectiveness on conspiracy theories or fascism.
Likewise, writing in The Hedgehog Review in 2023, Jonathan D. Teubner and Paul W. Gleason assert that fact-checking is ineffective against propaganda for at least three reasons: "First, since much of what skillful propagandists say will be true on a literal level, the fact-checker will be unable to refute them. Second, no matter how well-intentioned or convincing, the fact-check will also spread the initial claims further. Third, even if the fact-checker manages to catch a few inaccuracies, the larger picture and suggestion will remain in place, and it is this suggestion that moves minds and hearts, and eventually actions." They also note the very large amount of false information that regularly spreads around the world, overwhelming the hundreds of fact-checking groups; caution that a fact-checker systemically addressing propaganda potentially compromises their objectivity; and argue that even descriptive statements are subjective, leading to conflicting points of view. As a potential step to a solution, the authors suggest the need of a "scientific community" to establish falsifiable theories, "which in turn makes sense of the facts", noting the difficulty that this step would face in the digital media landscape of the Internet.
Social media platforms – Facebook in particular – have been accused by journalists and academics of undermining fact-checkers by providing them with little assistance; including "propagandist-linked organizations" such as CheckYourFact as partners; promoting outlets that have shared false information such as Breitbart and The Daily Caller on Facebook's newsfeed; and removing a fact-check about a false anti-abortion claim after receiving pressure from Republican senators. In 2022 and 2023, many social media platforms such as Meta, YouTube and Twitter have significantly reduced resources in Trust and safety, including fact-checking.Twitter under Elon Musk has severely limited access by academic researchers to Twitter's API by replacing previously free access with a subscription that starts at $42,000 per month, and by denying requests for access under the Digital Services Act. After the 2023 Reddit API changes, journalists, researchers and former Reddit moderators have expressed concerns about the spread of harmful misinformation, a relative lack of subject matter expertise from replacement mods, a vetting process of replacement mods seen as haphazard, a loss of third party tools often used for content moderation, and the difficulty for academic researchers to access Reddit data. Many fact-checkers rely heavily on social media platform partnerships for funding, technology and distributing their fact-checks.
Commentators have also shared concerns about the use of false equivalence as an argument in political fact-checking, citing examples from The Washington Post, The New York Times and The Associated Press where "mainstream fact-checkers appear to have attempted to manufacture false claims from progressive politicians...[out of] a desire to appear objective".
The term "fact-check" is also appropriated and overused by "partisan sites", which may lead people to "disregard fact-checking as a meaningless, motivated exercise if all content is claimed to be fact-checked".
Fact-checking journalists have been harassed online and offline, ranging from hate mail and death threats to police intimidation and lawfare.
Fact-checking in countries with limited freedom of speech
Operators of some fact-checking websites in China admit to self-censorship. Fact-checking websites in China often avoid commenting on political, economic, and other current affairs. Several Chinese fact-checking websites have been criticized for lack of transparency with regard to their methodology and sources, and for following Chinese propaganda.
Pre-publication fact-checking
Among the benefits of printing only checked copy is that it averts serious, sometimes costly, problems. These problems can include lawsuits for mistakes that damage people or businesses, but even small mistakes can cause a loss of reputation for the publication. The loss of reputation is often the more significant motivating factor for journalists.
Fact-checkers verify that the names, dates, and facts in an article or book are correct. For example, they may contact a person who is quoted in a proposed news article and ask the person whether this quotation is correct, or how to spell the person's name. Fact-checkers are primarily useful in catching accidental mistakes; they are not guaranteed safeguards against those who wish to commit journalistic frauds.
As a career
Professional fact-checkers have generally been hired by newspapers, magazines, and book publishers, probably starting in the early 1920s with the creation of Time magazine in the United States, though they were not originally called "fact-checkers". Fact-checkers may be aspiring writers, future editors, or freelancers engaged other projects; others are career professionals.
Historically, the field was considered women's work, and from the time of the first professional American fact-checker through at least the 1970s, the fact-checkers at a media company might be entirely female or primarily so.
The number of people employed in fact-checking varies by publication. Some organizations have substantial fact-checking departments. For example, The New Yorker magazine had 16 fact-checkers in 2003 and the fact-checking department of the German weekly magazine Der Spiegel counted 70 staff in 2017. Others may hire freelancers per piece or may combine fact-checking with other duties. Magazines are more likely to use fact-checkers than newspapers. Television and radio programs rarely employ dedicated fact-checkers, and instead expect others, including senior staff, to engage in fact-checking in addition to their other duties.
Checking original reportage
Stephen Glass began his journalism career as a fact-checker. He went on to invent fictitious stories, which he submitted as reportage, and which fact-checkers at The New Republic (and other weeklies for which he worked) never flagged. Michael Kelly, who edited some of Glass's concocted stories, blamed himself, rather than the fact-checkers, saying: "Any fact-checking system is built on trust ... If a reporter is willing to fake notes, it defeats the system. Anyway, the real vetting system is not fact-checking but the editor."[citation needed]
Alumni of the role
The following is a list of individuals for whom it has been reported, reliably, that they have played such a fact-checking role at some point in their careers, often as a stepping point to other journalistic endeavors, or to an independent writing career:
- Susan Choi – American novelist
- Anderson Cooper – Television anchorman
- William Gaddis – American novelist
- Virginia Heffernan – The New York Times television critic
- Roger Hodge – Former editor, Harper's Magazine
- David D. Kirkpatrick – The New York Times reporter
- Sean Wilsey – McSweeney's Editor and memoirist
See also
- Cherry picking
- Confirmation bias
- Copy editing – Improving the formatting, style and accuracy of text
- Firehose of falsehood
- Journalism – Production of reports on current events
- Investigative journalism – form of journalism where reporters deeply investigate a single topic
- Watchdog journalism – Journalism that plays an oversight role towards government, industry and society
- Media literacy
- Metascience
- Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act
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Further reading
- Soprano, Michael; Roitero, Kevin (May 2024). "Cognitive Biases in Fact-Checking and Their Countermeasures: A Review". Information Processing & Management. 61 (3, 103672). doi:10.1016/j.ipm.2024.103672.
- Nyhan, Brendan. 2020. "Facts and Myths about Misperceptions". Journal of Economic Perspectives, 34 (3): 220–236. doi:10.1257/jep.34.3.220
- Kessler, Glenn (25 June 2018). "Rapidly expanding fact-checking movement faces growing pains". The Washington Post.
- Bergstrom, Carl; West, Jevin (2017). "Syllabus: Calling Bullshit: Data Reasoning in a Digital World". University of Washington. Archived from the original on 6 February 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2018. "YouTube lecture series". YouTube. UW iSchool. 10 July 2017.
- Kiernan, Louise. (Dec. 29, 2017). "Calculating the Work Behind Our Work" ProPublica.
- Amazeen, Michelle (3 June 2015). "Sometimes political fact-checking works. Sometimes it doesn't. Here's what can make the difference". The Washington Post. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
- Davis, Katy (22 October 2012). "Study: Fact-Checkers Disagree on Who Lies Most" (Press release). The Center for Media and Public Affairs (CMPA), George Mason University. Archived from the original on 9 March 2015. Retrieved 28 August 2015.
{{cite press release}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Lewis-Kraus, Gideon (21 February 2012). "The Fact-Checker Versus the Fabulist". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 28 December 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
- Heffernan, Virginia (2010) "The Medium: What 'fact-checking' means online", The New York Times Magazine (online), 20 August 2010 (print edition, 22 August 2010, p. MM14). Accessed 27 July 2015.
- Silverman, Craig (2007). Regret the Error: How Media Mistakes Pollute the Press and Imperil Free Speech. Penguin Canada. ISBN 9780143186991.
External links
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2Wlc0dmRHaDFiV0l2TkM4MFlTOURiMjF0YjI1ekxXeHZaMjh1YzNabkx6TXdjSGd0UTI5dGJXOXVjeTFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Miller, Ielleen. "Research Guides: Journalism: Fact-Checking Sites". Eastern Washington University.
- Fact-checking organizations vetted by the International Fact Checking Network
- Fact-checking organizations vetted by the Duke Reporters' Lab
- Fact-Checking research and news by the Poynter Institute
Fact checking is the process of verifying the factual accuracy of questioned reporting and statements Fact checking can be conducted before or after the text or content is published or otherwise disseminated Internal fact checking is such checking done in house by the publisher to prevent inaccurate content from being published when the text is analyzed by a third party the process is called external fact checking Research suggests that fact checking can indeed correct perceptions among citizens as well as discourage politicians from spreading false or misleading claims However corrections may decay over time or be overwhelmed by cues from elites who promote less accurate claims Political fact checking is sometimes criticized as being opinion journalism A review of US politics fact checkers shows a mixed result of whether fact checking is an effective way to reduce misconceptions and whether the method is reliable History of fact checkingSensationalist newspapers in the 1850s and later led to a gradual need for a more factual media Colin Dickey has described the subsequent evolution of fact checking Key elements were the establishment of Associated Press in the 1850s short factual material needed Ralph Pulitzer of the New York World his Bureau of Accuracy and Fair Play 1912 Henry Luce and Time magazine original working title Facts and the famous fact checking department of The New Yorker More recently when the mainstream media has come under severe economic threat from online startups citation needed In addition the rapid spread of misinformation and conspiracy theories via social media is slowly creeping into mainstream media citation needed One solution according to whom is for more media staff to be assigned a fact checking role as for example The Washington Post citation needed Independent fact checking organisations have also become when prominent such as PolitiFact citation needed Types of fact checkingAnte hoc fact checking aims to identify errors so that the text can be corrected before dissemination or perhaps rejected Post hoc fact checking is most often followed by a written report of inaccuracies sometimes with a visual metric provided by the checking organization e g Pinocchios from The Washington Post Fact Checker or TRUTH O METER ratings from PolitiFact Several organizations are devoted to post hoc fact checking examples include FactCheck org and PolitiFact in the US and Full Fact in the UK External post hoc fact checking organizations first arose in the US in the early 2000s and the concept grew in relevance and spread to various other countries during the 2010s Post hoc fact checkingExternal post hoc fact checking by independent organizations began in the United States in the early 2000s In the 2010s particularly following the 2016 election of Donald Trump as US President fact checking gained a rise in popularity and spread to multiple countries mostly in Europe and Latin America However the US remains the largest market for fact checking Consistency across fact checking organizations One 2016 study finds that fact checkers PolitiFact FactCheck org and The Washington Post s Fact Checker overwhelmingly agree on their evaluations of claims A 2018 paper found little overlap in the statements checked by different fact checking organizations This paper compared 1 178 published fact checks from PolitiFact with 325 fact checks from The Washington Post s Fact Checker and found only 77 statements about 5 that both organizations checked For those 77 statements the fact checking organizations gave the same ratings for 49 statements and similar ratings for 22 about 92 agreement Choice of which statements to check Different fact checking organizations have shown different tendencies in their choice of which statements they publish fact checks about For example some are more likely to fact check a statement about climate change being real and others are more likely to fact check a statement about climate change being fake Effects Studies of post hoc fact checking have made clear that such efforts often result in changes in the behavior in general of both the speaker making them more careful in their pronouncements and of the listener or reader making them more discerning with regard to the factual accuracy of content observations include the propensities of audiences to be completely unpersuaded by corrections to errors regarding the most divisive subjects or the tendency to be more greatly persuaded by corrections of negative reporting e g attack ads and to see minds changed only when the individual in error was someone reasonably like minded to begin with Correcting misperceptions Studies have shown that fact checking can affect citizens belief in the accuracy of claims made in political advertisement A 2020 study by Paris School of Economics and Sciences Po economists found that falsehoods by Marine Le Pen during the 2017 French presidential election campaign i successfully persuaded voters ii lost their persuasiveness when fact checked and iii did not reduce voters political support for Le Pen when her claims were fact checked A 2017 study in the Journal of Politics found that individuals consistently update political beliefs in the appropriate direction even on facts that have clear implications for political party reputations though they do so cautiously and with some bias Interestingly those who identify with one of the political parties are no more biased or cautious than pure independents in their learning conditional on initial beliefs A study by Yale University cognitive scientists Gordon Pennycook and David G Rand found that Facebook tags of fake articles did significantly reduce their perceived accuracy relative to a control without tags but only modestly A Dartmouth study led by Brendan Nyhan found that Facebook tags had a greater impact than the Yale study found A disputed tag on a false headline reduced the number of respondents who considered the headline accurate from 29 to 19 whereas a rated false tag pushed the number down to 16 A 2019 study found that the disputed tag reduced Facebook users intentions to share a fake news story The Yale study found evidence of a backfire effect among Trump supporters younger than 26 years whereby the presence of both untagged and tagged fake articles made the untagged fake articles appear more accurate In response to research which questioned the effectiveness of the Facebook disputed tags Facebook decided to drop the tags in December 2017 and would instead put articles which fact checked a fake news story next to the fake news story link whenever it is shared on Facebook Based on the findings of a 2017 study in the journal Psychological Science the most effective ways to reduce misinformation through corrections is by limiting detailed descriptions of or arguments in favor of the misinformation walking through the reasons why a piece of misinformation is false rather than just labelling it false presenting new and credible information which allows readers to update their knowledge of events and understand why they developed an inaccurate understanding in the first place using video as videos appear to be more effective than text at increasing attention and reducing confusion making videos more effective at correcting misperception than text Large studies by Ethan Porter and Thomas J Wood found that misinformation propagated by Donald Trump was more difficult to dispel with the same techniques and generated the following recommendations Highly credible sources are the most effective especially those which surprisingly report facts against their own perceived bias Reframing the issue by adding context can be more effective than simply labeling it as incorrect or unproven Challenging readers identity or worldview reduces effectiveness Fact checking immediately is more effective before false ideas have spread widely A 2019 meta analysis of research into the effects of fact checking on misinformation found that fact checking has substantial positive impacts on political beliefs but that this impact weakened when fact checkers used truth scales refuted only parts of a claim and when they fact checked campaign related statements Individuals preexisting beliefs ideology and knowledge affected to what extent the fact checking had an impact A 2019 study in the Journal of Experimental Political Science found strong evidence that citizens are willing to accept corrections to fake news regardless of their ideology and the content of the fake stories A 2018 study found that Republicans were more likely to correct their false information on voter fraud if the correction came from Breitbart News rather than a non partisan neutral source such as PolitiFact A 2022 study found that individuals exposed to a fact check of a false statement by a far right politician were less likely to share the false statement Some studies have found that exposure to fact checks had durable effects on reducing misperceptions whereas other studies have found no effects Scholars have debated whether fact checking could lead to a backfire effect whereby correcting false information may make partisan individuals cling more strongly to their views One study found evidence of such a backfire effect but several other studies did not Political discourse A 2015 experimental study found that fact checking can encourage politicians to not spread misinformation The study found that it might help improve political discourse by increasing the reputational costs or risks of spreading misinformation for political elites The researchers sent a series of letters about the risks to their reputation and electoral security if they were caught making questionable statements The legislators who were sent these letters were substantially less likely to receive a negative fact checking rating or to have their accuracy questioned publicly suggesting that fact checking can reduce inaccuracy when it poses a salient threat Fact checking may also encourage some politicians to engage in strategic ambiguity in their statements which may impede the fact checking movement s goals Political preferences One experimental study found that fact checking during debates affected viewers assessment of the candidates debate performance and greater willingness to vote for a candidate when the fact check indicates that the candidate is being honest A study of Trump supporters during the 2016 presidential campaign found that while fact checks of false claims made by Trump reduced his supporters belief in the false claims in question the corrections did not alter their attitudes towards Trump A 2019 study found that summary fact checking where the fact checker summarizes how many false statements a politician has made has a greater impact on reducing support for a politician than fact checking of individual statements made by the politician Informal fact checking Individual readers perform some types of fact checking such as comparing claims in one news story against claims in another Rabbi Moshe Benovitz has observed that modern students use their wireless worlds to augment skepticism and to reject dogma He says this has positive implications for values development Fact checking can become a learned skill and technology can be harnessed in a way that makes it second nature By finding opportunities to integrate technology into learning students will automatically sense the beautiful blending of their cyber and non virtual worlds Instead of two spheres coexisting uneasily and warily orbiting one another there is a valuable experience of synthesis According to Queen s University Belfast researcher Jennifer Rose because fake news is created with the intention of misleading readers online news consumers who attempt to fact check the articles they read may incorrectly conclude that a fake news article is legitimate Rose states A diligent online news consumer is likely at a pervasive risk of inferring truth from false premises and suggests that fact checking alone is not enough to reduce fake news consumption Despite this Rose asserts that fact checking ought to remain on educational agendas to help combat fake news Detecting fake news The term fake news became popularized with the 2016 United States presidential election causing concern among some that online media platforms were especially susceptible to disseminating disinformation and misinformation Fake news articles tend to come from either satirical news websites or from websites with an incentive to propagate false information either as clickbait or to serve a purpose The language specifically is typically more inflammatory in fake news than real articles in part because the purpose is to confuse and generate clicks Furthermore modeling techniques such as n gram encodings and bag of words have served as other linguistic techniques to estimate the legitimacy of a news source On top of that researchers have determined that visual based cues also play a factor in categorizing an article specifically some features can be designed to assess if a picture was legitimate and provides us more clarity on the news There is also many social context features that can play a role as well as the model of spreading the news Websites such as Snopes try to detect this information manually while certain universities are trying to build mathematical models to assist in this work Some individuals and organizations publish their fact checking efforts on the internet These may have a special subject matter focus such as Snopes com s focus on urban legends or the Reporters Lab at Duke University s focus on providing resources to journalists Fake news and social media The adaptation of social media as a legitimate and commonly used platform has created extensive concerns for fake news in this domain The spread of fake news via social media platforms such as Facebook Twitter and Instagram presents the opportunity for extremely negative effects on society therefore new fields of research regarding fake news detection on social media is gaining momentum However fake news detection on social media presents challenges that renders previous data mining and detection techniques inadequate As such researchers are calling for more work to be done regarding fake news as characterized against psychology and social theories and adapting existing data mining algorithms to apply to social media networks Further multiple scientific articles have been published urging the field further to find automatic ways in which fake news can be filtered out of social media timelines Methodology Lateral reading or getting a brief overview of a topic from lots of sources instead of digging deeply into one is a popular method professional fact checkers use to quickly get a better sense of the truth of a particular claim Digital tools and services commonly used by fact checkers include but are not limited to Reverse image search engines Google Images TinEye Bing Image Search Baidu Image Search improper synthesis Yandex Image Search needs update Archiving services Internet Archive Archive today Perma cc Encyclopedias Wikipedia Web analytics platforms Similarweb Image and video analysis tools InVID FotoForensics Domain registration information DomainTools DomainBigData WHOIS com General search engines Google Search Web mapping platforms Google Maps Google Street View Google Earth Yandex Maps needs update Social media monitoring platforms CrowdTangle needs update TweetDeck needs update BuzzSumo needs update Ongoing research in fact checking and detecting fake news Since the 2016 United States presidential election fake news has been a popular topic of discussion by President Trump and news outlets The reality of fake news had become omnipresent and a lot of research has gone into understanding identifying and combating fake news Also a number of researchers began with the usage of fake news to influence the 2016 presidential campaign One research found evidence of pro Trump fake news being selectively targeted on conservatives and pro Trump supporters in 2016 The researchers found that social media sites Facebook in particular to be powerful platforms to spread certain fake news to targeted groups to appeal to their sentiments during the 2016 presidential race Additionally researchers from Stanford NYU and NBER found evidence to show how engagement with fake news on Facebook and Twitter was high throughout 2016 Recently a lot of work has gone into helping detect and identify fake news through machine learning and artificial intelligence In 2018 researchers at MIT s CSAIL created and tested a machine learning algorithm to identify false information by looking for common patterns words and symbols that typically appear in fake news More so they released an open source data set with a large catalog of historical news sources with their veracity scores to encourage other researchers to explore and develop new methods and technologies for detecting fake news citation needed In 2022 researchers have also demonstrated the feasibility of falsity scores for popular and official figures by developing such for over 800 contemporary elites on Twitter as well as associated exposure scores There are also demonstrations of platform built in by design as well browser integrated currently in the form of addons misinformation mitigation Efforts such as providing and viewing structured accuracy assessments on posts are not currently supported by the platforms Trust in the default or in decentralized designs user selected providers of assessments and their reliability as well as the large quantities of posts and articles are two of the problems such approaches may face Moreover they cannot mitigate misinformation in chats print media and TV International Fact Checking Day The concept for International Fact Checking Day was introduced at a conference for journalists and fact checkers at the London School of Economics and Political Science in June 2014 The holiday was officially created in 2016 and first celebrated on April 2 2017 The idea for International Fact Checking day rose out of the many misinformation campaigns found on the internet particularly social media sites It rose in importance after the 2016 elections which brought fake news as well as accusations of it to the forefront of media issues The holiday is held on April 2 because April 1 is a day for fools April 2 is a day for facts Activities for International Fact Checking Day consist of various media organizations contributing to fact checking resources articles and lessons for students and the general public to learn more about how to identify fake news and stop the spread of misinformation 2020 s International Fact Checking Day focused specifically on how to accurately identify information about COVID 19 Limitations and controversies Research has shown that fact checking has limits and can even backfire which is when a correction increases the their belief in the misconception One reason is that it can be interpreted as an argument from authority leading to resistance and hardening beliefs because identity and cultural positions cannot be disproved In other words while news articles can be fact checked personal beliefs cannot Critics argue that political fact checking is increasingly used as opinion journalism Criticism has included that fact checking organizations in themselves are biased or that it is impossible to apply absolute terms such as true or false to inherently debatable claims In September 2016 a Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey found that just 29 of all Likely U S Voters trust media fact checking of candidates comments Sixty two percent 62 believe instead that news organizations skew the facts to help candidates they support A paper by Andrew Guess of Princeton University Brendan Nyhan Dartmouth College and Jason Reifler University of Exeter found that consumers of fake news tended to have less favorable views of fact checking in particular Trump supporters The paper found that fake news consumers rarely encountered fact checks only about half of the Americans who visited a fake news website during the study period also saw any fact check from one of the dedicated fact checking website 14 0 Deceptive websites that pose as fact checkers have also been used to promote disinformation this tactic has been used by both Russia and Turkey During the COVID 19 pandemic Facebook announced it would remove false or debunked claims about the novel coronavirus which created a global pandemic based on its fact checking partners collectively known as the International Fact Checking Network In 2021 Facebook reversed its ban on posts speculating the COVID 19 disease originated from Chinese labs following developments in the investigations into the origin of COVID 19 including claims by the Biden administration and a letter by eighteen scientists in the journal Science saying a new investigation is needed because theories of accidental release from a lab and zoonotic spillover both remain viable The policy led to an article by The New York Post that suggested a lab leak would be plausible to be initially labeled as false information on the platform This reignited debates into the notion of scientific consensus In an article published by the medical journal The BMJ journalist Laurie Clarke said The contentious nature of these decisions is partly down to how social media platforms define the slippery concepts of misinformation versus disinformation This decision relies on the idea of a scientific consensus But some scientists say that this smothers heterogeneous opinions problematically reinforcing a misconception that science is a monolith David Spiegelhalter the Winton Professor of the Public Understanding of Risk at Cambridge University argued that behind closed doors scientists spend the whole time arguing and deeply disagreeing on some fairly fundamental things Clarke further argued that The binary idea that scientific assertions are either correct or incorrect has fed into the divisiveness that has characterised the pandemic Several commentators have noted limitations of political post hoc fact checking While interviewing Andrew Hart in 2019 about political fact checking in the United States Nima Shirazi and Adam Johnson discuss what they perceive as an unspoken conservative bias framed as neutrality in certain fact checks citing argument from authority hyper literal scolding of people on the left who criticized the assumptions of American imperialism rebuttals that may not be factual themselves issues of general media bias and the near ubiquitous refusal to identify patterns trends and intent in politicians false statements They further argue that political fact checking focuses exclusively on describing facts over making moral judgments ex the is ought problem assert that it relies on public reason to attempt to discredit public figures and question its effectiveness on conspiracy theories or fascism Likewise writing in The Hedgehog Review in 2023 Jonathan D Teubner and Paul W Gleason assert that fact checking is ineffective against propaganda for at least three reasons First since much of what skillful propagandists say will be true on a literal level the fact checker will be unable to refute them Second no matter how well intentioned or convincing the fact check will also spread the initial claims further Third even if the fact checker manages to catch a few inaccuracies the larger picture and suggestion will remain in place and it is this suggestion that moves minds and hearts and eventually actions They also note the very large amount of false information that regularly spreads around the world overwhelming the hundreds of fact checking groups caution that a fact checker systemically addressing propaganda potentially compromises their objectivity and argue that even descriptive statements are subjective leading to conflicting points of view As a potential step to a solution the authors suggest the need of a scientific community to establish falsifiable theories which in turn makes sense of the facts noting the difficulty that this step would face in the digital media landscape of the Internet Social media platforms Facebook in particular have been accused by journalists and academics of undermining fact checkers by providing them with little assistance including propagandist linked organizations such as CheckYourFact as partners promoting outlets that have shared false information such as Breitbart and The Daily Caller on Facebook s newsfeed and removing a fact check about a false anti abortion claim after receiving pressure from Republican senators In 2022 and 2023 many social media platforms such as Meta YouTube and Twitter have significantly reduced resources in Trust and safety including fact checking Twitter under Elon Musk has severely limited access by academic researchers to Twitter s API by replacing previously free access with a subscription that starts at 42 000 per month and by denying requests for access under the Digital Services Act After the 2023 Reddit API changes journalists researchers and former Reddit moderators have expressed concerns about the spread of harmful misinformation a relative lack of subject matter expertise from replacement mods a vetting process of replacement mods seen as haphazard a loss of third party tools often used for content moderation and the difficulty for academic researchers to access Reddit data Many fact checkers rely heavily on social media platform partnerships for funding technology and distributing their fact checks Commentators have also shared concerns about the use of false equivalence as an argument in political fact checking citing examples from The Washington Post The New York Times and The Associated Press where mainstream fact checkers appear to have attempted to manufacture false claims from progressive politicians out of a desire to appear objective The term fact check is also appropriated and overused by partisan sites which may lead people to disregard fact checking as a meaningless motivated exercise if all content is claimed to be fact checked Fact checking journalists have been harassed online and offline ranging from hate mail and death threats to police intimidation and lawfare Fact checking in countries with limited freedom of speech Operators of some fact checking websites in China admit to self censorship Fact checking websites in China often avoid commenting on political economic and other current affairs Several Chinese fact checking websites have been criticized for lack of transparency with regard to their methodology and sources and for following Chinese propaganda Pre publication fact checkingAmong the benefits of printing only checked copy is that it averts serious sometimes costly problems These problems can include lawsuits for mistakes that damage people or businesses but even small mistakes can cause a loss of reputation for the publication The loss of reputation is often the more significant motivating factor for journalists Fact checkers verify that the names dates and facts in an article or book are correct For example they may contact a person who is quoted in a proposed news article and ask the person whether this quotation is correct or how to spell the person s name Fact checkers are primarily useful in catching accidental mistakes they are not guaranteed safeguards against those who wish to commit journalistic frauds As a career Professional fact checkers have generally been hired by newspapers magazines and book publishers probably starting in the early 1920s with the creation of Time magazine in the United States though they were not originally called fact checkers Fact checkers may be aspiring writers future editors or freelancers engaged other projects others are career professionals Historically the field was considered women s work and from the time of the first professional American fact checker through at least the 1970s the fact checkers at a media company might be entirely female or primarily so The number of people employed in fact checking varies by publication Some organizations have substantial fact checking departments For example The New Yorker magazine had 16 fact checkers in 2003 and the fact checking department of the German weekly magazine Der Spiegel counted 70 staff in 2017 Others may hire freelancers per piece or may combine fact checking with other duties Magazines are more likely to use fact checkers than newspapers Television and radio programs rarely employ dedicated fact checkers and instead expect others including senior staff to engage in fact checking in addition to their other duties Checking original reportage Stephen Glass began his journalism career as a fact checker He went on to invent fictitious stories which he submitted as reportage and which fact checkers at The New Republic and other weeklies for which he worked never flagged Michael Kelly who edited some of Glass s concocted stories blamed himself rather than the fact checkers saying Any fact checking system is built on trust If a reporter is willing to fake notes it defeats the system Anyway the real vetting system is not fact checking but the editor citation needed Alumni of the role The following is a list of individuals for whom it has been reported reliably that they have played such a fact checking role at some point in their careers often as a stepping point to other journalistic endeavors or to an independent writing career Susan Choi American novelist Anderson Cooper Television anchorman William Gaddis American novelist Virginia Heffernan The New York Times television critic Roger Hodge Former editor Harper s Magazine David D Kirkpatrick The New York Times reporter Sean Wilsey McSweeney s Editor and memoiristSee alsoCherry picking Confirmation bias Copy editing Improving the formatting style and accuracy of text Firehose of falsehood Journalism Production of reports on current events Investigative journalism form of journalism where reporters deeply investigate a single topic Watchdog journalism Journalism that plays an oversight role towards government industry and society Media literacy Metascience Section 230 of the Communications Decency ActReferencesGraves Lucas Amazeen Michelle A 25 February 2019 Fact Checking as Idea and Practice in Journalism Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190228613 013 808 ISBN 9780190228613 Drutman Lee 3 June 2020 Fact Checking Misinformation Can Work But It Might Not Be Enough FiveThirtyEight Retrieved 5 December 2020 Nyhan Brendan Reifler Jason 1 July 2015 The Effect of Fact Checking on Elites A Field Experiment on U S State Legislators American Journal of Political Science 59 3 628 640 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Elizabeth Jane No cake on International Fact Checking Day Celebrate by correcting fake news USA Today How the world celebrated the third International Fact Checking Day Poynter 9 April 2019 Don t be fooled Third annual International Fact Checking Day empowers citizens around the world to sort fact from fiction Poynter 2 April 2019 Nyhan Brendan Reifler Jason 2010 When Corrections Fail The Persistence of Political Misperceptions Political Behavior 32 2 303 330 doi 10 1007 s11109 010 9112 2 ISSN 0190 9320 Swire Thompson Briony DeGutis Joseph Lazer David 2020 Searching for the backfire effect Measurement and design considerations Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 9 3 286 299 doi 10 1016 j jarmac 2020 06 006 ISSN 2211 369X PMC 7462781 PMID 32905023 Diaz Ruiz Carlos Nilsson Tomas 2023 Disinformation and Echo Chambers How Disinformation Circulates on Social Media Through Identity Driven Controversies Journal of Public Policy amp Marketing 42 1 18 35 doi 10 1177 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title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Kirkpatrick David D David Kirkpatrick The New York Times Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 15 June 2013 Sean Wilsey About Sean Wilsey Penguin Group Us penguingroup com Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 18 October 2011 verification needed Further readingSoprano Michael Roitero Kevin May 2024 Cognitive Biases in Fact Checking and Their Countermeasures A Review Information Processing amp Management 61 3 103672 doi 10 1016 j ipm 2024 103672 Nyhan Brendan 2020 Facts and Myths about Misperceptions Journal of Economic Perspectives 34 3 220 236 doi 10 1257 jep 34 3 220 Kessler Glenn 25 June 2018 Rapidly expanding fact checking movement faces growing pains The Washington Post Bergstrom Carl West Jevin 2017 Syllabus Calling Bullshit Data Reasoning in a Digital World University of Washington Archived from the original on 6 February 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2018 YouTube lecture series YouTube UW iSchool 10 July 2017 Kiernan Louise Dec 29 2017 Calculating the Work Behind Our Work ProPublica Amazeen Michelle 3 June 2015 Sometimes political fact checking works Sometimes it doesn t Here s what can make the difference The Washington Post Retrieved 28 July 2015 Davis Katy 22 October 2012 Study Fact Checkers Disagree on Who Lies Most Press release The Center for Media and Public Affairs CMPA George Mason University Archived from the original on 9 March 2015 Retrieved 28 August 2015 a href wiki Template Cite press release title Template Cite press release cite press release a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Lewis Kraus Gideon 21 February 2012 The Fact Checker Versus the Fabulist The New York Times Archived from the original on 28 December 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2015 Heffernan Virginia 2010 The Medium What fact checking means online The New York Times Magazine online 20 August 2010 print edition 22 August 2010 p MM14 Accessed 27 July 2015 Silverman Craig 2007 Regret the Error How Media Mistakes Pollute the Press and Imperil Free Speech Penguin Canada ISBN 9780143186991 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Fact checking Miller Ielleen Research Guides Journalism Fact Checking Sites Eastern Washington University Fact checking organizations vetted by the International Fact Checking Network Fact checking organizations vetted by the Duke Reporters Lab Fact Checking research and news by the Poynter Institute