In 1998, a paper linking childhood vaccines with autism was published in prestigious journal,聽The Lancet, only to be retracted in 2010 when the science was debunked.
Fourteen years since its retraction, the paper鈥檚 original claim continues to flourish on social media, fuelling misinformation and disinformation around vaccine safety and efficacy.
A University of Sydney team is hoping to help social media users identify posts featuring misinformation and disinformation arising from now-debunked science. They have developed and tested a new interface that helps users discover further information about potentially fraught claims on social media.
They created and tested the efficacy of adding a 鈥渕ore information鈥澛燽utton聽to social media posts. The聽button聽links to a drop down which allows users to see more details about claims or information in news posts, including information on whether that news is based on retracted science. The reseachers say social media platforms could use an algorithm to聽link posts to details of retracted science.
Testing of the interface among a group of participants showed that when people understand the idea of retraction and can easily find when health news is based on a claim from retracted research, it can help reduce the impact and spread of misinformation as they are less likely to share it.
鈥淜nowledge is power,鈥 said聽Professor Judy Kay聽from the聽School of Computer Science聽who led the research. 鈥淒uring the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, myths around the efficacy and safety of vaccines abounded.聽We want to help people to better understand when science has been debunked or challenged so they can make informed decisions about their health,鈥 she said.
鈥淭he ability to read and properly interpret often complex scientific papers is a very niche skill 鈥 not everybody has that literacy or is up to date on the latest science. Many people would have seen posts about now-debunked vaccine research and thought: 鈥榠t was published in a medical journal, so it must be true鈥. Sadly, that isn鈥檛 the case for retracted publications.鈥
鈥淪ocial media platforms could do much better than they do now,鈥 said co-author and PhD student Waheeb Yaqub. 鈥淒uring the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, myths around the efficacy and safety of vaccines spread like wildfire.鈥
鈥淥ur approach shows that when people understand the idea of retraction and can find when health news is based on a retracted science article, it can reduce the impact and spread of misinformation,鈥 he said.
The research was conducted with 44 participants who started with little or no understanding of scientific retraction. After completing a five-minute tutorial, they rated how various reasons for retraction make a paper鈥檚 findings invalid.
The researchers then studied how participants used the 鈥渕ore information鈥 button. They found the new information altered the participants鈥 beliefs on three health claims based on retracted papers shared on social media.
These claims were: whether masks are effective in limiting the spread of coronavirus; that the Mediterranean diet is effective in reducing heart disease; and snacking while watching an action movie leads to overeating.
The first claim was based on two papers, one which had been retracted and one which hadn鈥檛. The other two claims were based on retracted papers. The researchers specifically chose papers of which participants would have differing knowledge.
鈥淧articipants confidently considered masks were effective. Most didn鈥檛 know about the Mediterranean diet and so were unsure about whether it was true. Many people whose personal experience of snacking during films made them believe it was true.鈥
The聽button聽influenced participants when they knew little about a topic to begin with. When the participants discovered the post was based on a retracted paper, they were less likely to like or share it.
On social media, both misinformation聽(the inadvertent spread of false information) and disinformation (false information deliberately spread with malicious intent), are rising.
Papers can be retracted when problems with methodology, results or experiments are found.
The researchers say it would be feasible for social media platforms to develop back-end software that links databases of retracted papers.
鈥淚f social media platforms want to maintain their quality and integrity, they should look to implement聽simple聽methods like ours,鈥 Professor Kay said.
The study was published in聽.
顿贰颁尝础搁础罢滨翱狈听
The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Waheeb Yaqub is the recipient of a research scholarship.