The voice of few, the opinions of many: evidence of social biases in Twitter COVID-19 fake news sharing

R Soc Open Sci. 2022 Oct 26;9(10):220716. doi: 10.1098/rsos.220716. eCollection 2022 Oct.

Abstract

Online platforms play a relevant role in the creation and diffusion of false or misleading news. Concerningly, the COVID-19 pandemic is shaping a communication network which reflects the emergence of collective attention towards a topic that rapidly gained universal interest. Here, we characterize the dynamics of this network on Twitter, analysing how unreliable content distributes among its users. We find that a minority of accounts is responsible for the majority of the misinformation circulating online, and identify two categories of users: a few active ones, playing the role of 'creators', and a majority playing the role of 'consumers'. The relative proportion of these groups (approx. 14% creators-86% consumers) appears stable over time: consumers are mostly exposed to the opinions of a vocal minority of creators (which are the origin of 82% of fake content in our data), that could be mistakenly understood as representative of the majority of users. The corresponding pressure from a perceived majority is identified as a potential driver of the ongoing COVID-19 infodemic.

Keywords: computational social science; data analysis; fake news; social networks; social psychology.

Publication types

  • News

Associated data

  • figshare/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6265219
  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.bzkh189cc