Telling Lies Together? Sharing News as a Form of Social Authentication

B. K. Waruwu, E. Tandoc, A. Duffy, N. Kim, R. Ling

Research output: Conference PapersRGC 32 - Refereed conference paper (without host publication)peer-review

Abstract

The increasingly assertive position of social media as a news source means that news audiences can no longer depend on traditional journalists for information verification. Instead, they must determine the news credibility on their own. The majority of information credibility studies have considered news audiences’ information evaluation as a purely cognitive endeavor, implying that individuals can arrive at valid information without social validation. By drawing on self-categorization theory, this article re-conceptualizes audiences’ acts of news authentication by considering it not as a one-off activity under the uncontested control of the individual, but as a cycle of collective authentication strategies whereby individual authentication and social validation are entangled in the context-dependent processing of social news. To do this, we unpacked the social dimension of news authentication by looking at the social motivation, strategies, as well as the consequences that support it through a series of focus group discussions in Singapore.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - May 2020
Event70th Annual International Communication Association Conference (ICA 2020) - Virtual
Duration: 20 May 202026 May 2020
https://www.icahdq.org/page/ICA2020

Conference

Conference70th Annual International Communication Association Conference (ICA 2020)
Abbreviated title70th Annual ICA Conference
Period20/05/2026/05/20
Internet address

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