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The Effect of Fact-Checking on Elites: A Field Experiment on U.S. State Legislators
Authors
Acemoglu
Adair
+64 more
Alcorn
Ansolabehere
Arnold
Balz
Bantz
Bergan
Berkman
Broockman
Butler
Butler
Butler
Butler
Campante
Cappella
Carpini
Carr
Cunningham
Duflo
Duflo
Fallows
Fenno
Ferraz
Fogarty
Fritz
Gentzkow
Gottfried
Iyengar
Iyengar
Jamieson
Jamieson
Kessler
Khan
Levitt
Lewandowsky
Loewen
Lynch
Malesky
Marx
Mayhew
Moore
Nickerson
Nyhan
Nyhan
Nyhan
Nyhan
Nyhan
Nyhan
Olken
Pfau
Pingree
Plasser
Prior
Redlawsk
Schaffner
Schaffner
Schulhofer-Wohl
Sinclair
Smith
Snyder
Spivak
Squire
Stroud
Taber
Tetlock
Publication date
27 October 2014
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Abstract
© 2014, Midwest Political Science Association. Does external monitoring improve democratic performance? Fact-checking has come to play an increasingly important role in political coverage in the United States, but some research suggests it may be ineffective at reducing public misperceptions about controversial issues. However, fact-checking might instead help improve political discourse by increasing the reputational costs or risks of spreading misinformation for political elites. To evaluate this deterrent hypothesis, we conducted a field experiment on a diverse group of state legislators from nine U.S. states in the months before the November 2012 election. In the experiment, a randomly assigned subset of state legislators was 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
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info:doi/10.1111%2Fajps.12162
Last time updated on 28/02/2019
Southampton (e-Prints Soton)
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oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:497088
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Open Research Exeter
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oai:ore.exeter.ac.uk:10871/215...
Last time updated on 17/02/2017