Fake news on Twitter during the 2016 U.S. presidential election
Northeastern University · Harvard University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The spread of fake news on social media became a public concern in the United States after the 2016 presidential election. We examined exposure to and sharing of fake news by registered voters on Twitter and found that engagement with fake news sources was extremely concentrated. Only 1% of individuals accounted for 80% of fake news source exposures, and 0.1% accounted for nearly 80% of fake news sources shared. Individuals most likely to engage with fake news sources were conservative leaning, older, and highly engaged with political news. A cluster of fake news sources shared overlapping audiences on the extreme right, but for people across the political spectrum, most political news exposure still came from…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 508.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 67
Authors
5- NGNir GrinbergCorresponding
Northeastern University, Harvard University, Quantitative BioSciences
- KJKenneth JosephCorresponding
University at Buffalo, State University of New York
- LFLisa FriedlandCorresponding
Northeastern University
- BSBriony Swire‐Thompson
Northeastern University, Harvard University, Quantitative BioSciences
- DLDavid LazerCorresponding
Northeastern University, Harvard University, Quantitative BioSciences
Topics & keywords
- Presidential election
- Fake news
- Political science
- Presidential system
- Advertising
- Internet privacy
- Computer science
- Business