E-paper

Community Fact-Checks Trigger Moral Outrage in Replies to Misleading Posts on Social Media


Authors listChuai, Yuwei; Sergeeva, Anastasia; Lenzini, Gabriele; Pröllochs, Nicolas

Publication year2024

JournalarXiv

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2409.08829

PublisherArxiv.org


Abstract

Displaying community fact-checks is a promising approach to reduce engagement with misinformation on social media. However, how users respond to misleading content emotionally after community fact-checks are displayed on posts is unclear. Here, we employ quasi-experimental methods to causally analyze changes in sentiments and (moral) emotions in replies to misleading posts following the display of community fact-checks. Our evaluation is based on a large-scale panel dataset comprising N=2,225,260 replies across 1841 source posts from X's Community Notes platform. We find that informing users about falsehoods through community fact-checks significantly increases negativity (by 7.3%), anger (by 13.2%), disgust (by 4.7%), and moral outrage (by 16.0%) in the corresponding replies. These results indicate that users perceive spreading misinformation as a violation of social norms and that those who spread misinformation should expect negative reactions once their content is debunked. We derive important implications for the design of community-based fact-checking systems.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleChuai, Y., Sergeeva, A., Lenzini, G. and Pröllochs, N. (2024) Community Fact-Checks Trigger Moral Outrage in Replies to Misleading Posts on Social Media [Preprint]. arXiv, Article 2409.08829. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2409.08829

APA Citation styleChuai, Y., Sergeeva, A., Lenzini, G., & Pröllochs, N. (2024). Community Fact-Checks Trigger Moral Outrage in Replies to Misleading Posts on Social Media. arXiv. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2409.08829


Last updated on 2025-26-06 at 09:14