Best Practices for Ethical Conduct of Misinformation Research: A Scoping Review and Critical Commentary
Misinformation can have noxious impacts on cognition, fostering the formation of false beliefs, retroactively distorting memory for events, and influencing reasoning and decision-making even after it has been credibly corrected. Researchers investigating the impacts of real-world misinformation are...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European psychologist 2023-07, Vol.28 (3), p.139-150 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Misinformation can have noxious impacts on cognition,
fostering the formation of false beliefs, retroactively distorting memory for
events, and influencing reasoning and decision-making even after it has been
credibly corrected. Researchers investigating the impacts of real-world
misinformation are therefore faced with an ethical issue: they must consider the
immediate and long-term consequences of exposing participants to false claims.
In this paper, we first present an overview of the ethical risks associated with
real-world misinformation. We then report results from a scoping review of
ethical practices in misinformation research. We investigated (1) the extent to
which researchers report the details of their ethical practices, including
issues of informed consent and debriefing, and (2) the specific steps that
researchers report taking to protect participants from the consequences of
misinformation exposure. We found that fewer than 30% of misinformation papers
report any debriefing, and almost no authors assessed the effectiveness of their
debriefing procedure. Building on the findings from this review, we evaluate the
balance of risk versus reward currently operating in this field and propose a
set of guidelines for best practices. Our ultimate goal is to allow researchers
the freedom to investigate questions of considerable scientific and societal
impact while meeting their ethical obligations to participants. |
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ISSN: | 1016-9040 1878-531X |
DOI: | 10.1027/1016-9040/a000491 |