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You are lying! How misinformation accusations spread on Twitter

Ashish S. Galande (Indian Institute of Management Udaipur, Udaipur, India)
Frank Mathmann (Faculty of Business and Law, School of Advertising, Marketing and PR, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Cesar Ariza-Rojas (Faculty of Business and Law, School of Economics and Finance, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Benno Torgler (Faculty of Business and Law, School of Economics and Finance, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Janina Garbas (School of Business and Economics, Chair of Marketing, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany)

Internet Research

ISSN: 1066-2243

Article publication date: 21 September 2023

Issue publication date: 20 November 2023

382

Abstract

Purpose

Misinformation is notoriously difficult to combat. Although social media firms have focused on combating the publication of misinformation, misinformation accusations, an important by-product of the spread of misinformation, have been neglected. The authors offer insights into factors contributing to the spread of misinformation accusations on social media platforms.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use a corpus of 234,556 tweets about the 2020 US presidential election (Study 1) and 99,032 tweets about the 2022 US midterm elections (Study 2) to show how the sharing of misinformation accusations is explained by locomotion orientation.

Findings

The study findings indicate that the sharing of misinformation accusations is explained by writers' lower locomotion orientation, which is amplified among liberal tweet writers.

Research limitations/implications

Practitioners and policymakers can use the study findings to track and reduce the spread of misinformation accusations by developing algorithms to analyze the language of posts. A limitation of this research is that it focuses on political misinformation accusations. Future research in different contexts, such as vaccines, would be pertinent.

Practical implications

The authors show how social media firms can identify messages containing misinformation accusations with the potential to become viral by considering the tweet writer's locomotion language and geographical data.

Social implications

Early identification of messages containing misinformation accusations can help to improve the quality of the political conversation and electoral decision-making.

Originality/value

Strategies used by social media platforms to identify misinformation lack scale and perform poorly, making it important for social media platforms to manage misinformation accusations in an effort to retain trust. The authors identify linguistic and geographical factors that drive misinformation accusation retweets.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Conflict of interest: The authors declare that they do not have any conflict of interest.

Citation

Galande, A.S., Mathmann, F., Ariza-Rojas, C., Torgler, B. and Garbas, J. (2023), "You are lying! How misinformation accusations spread on Twitter", Internet Research, Vol. 33 No. 5, pp. 1907-1927. https://doi.org/10.1108/INTR-07-2022-0572

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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