articleJournal of PersonalityMar 31, 2019GREEN OA

Who falls for fake news? The roles of bullshit receptivity, overclaiming, familiarity, and analytic thinking

University of Regina · Massachusetts Institute of Technology

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

Fake news represents a particularly egregious and direct avenue by which inaccurate beliefs have been propagated via social media. We investigate the psychological profile of individuals who fall prey to fake news. METHOD: We recruited 1,606 participants from Amazon's Mechanical Turk for three online surveys.

Results

The tendency to ascribe profundity to randomly generated sentences-pseudo-profound bullshit receptivity-correlates positively with perceptions of fake news accuracy, and negatively with the ability to differentiate between fake and real news (media truth discernment). Relatedly, individuals who overclaim their level of knowledge also judge fake news to be more accurate. We also extend previous research indicating that analytic thinking correlates negatively with perceived accuracy by showing that this relationship is not moderated by the presence/absence of the headline's source (which has no effect on accuracy), or by familiarity with the headlines (which correlates positively with perceived accuracy of fake and real news).

Citation impact

808
total citations
FWCI
224.72
Percentile
100%
References
99
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Receptivity
  • Psychology
  • Social psychology
  • Epistemology
  • Philosophy
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Funding