Vick Hope: Emotions! We share them all day. Quite often we don鈥檛 say anything, the right emoji does the job for us. We feel. With fake news, we feel a lot. Latest research shows that only two percent of young people can spot fake news. With a bit of know-how, there鈥檚 no reason we can鈥檛 change that figure to 100 percent. Fake news deliberately plays on our emotions and it鈥檚 our strong reactions that make us want to hit the share button, understanding how this works is the first step to fighting back.
Student: All fake news is based off a feeling.
Student: It鈥檚 all about making something boring really extreme.
Student: When we share things it鈥檚 because we鈥檝e felt an emotional connection to it.
Dr Radha Modgil: So fake news affects our emotions in two ways. It contains dramatic and emotional headlines and words to drag us in, like best, worst, terrible, exciting, they really provoke an emotional reaction and often the stories also contain the word 鈥測ou鈥, so you feel directly affected and drawn in by the story.
Student: People do make headlines that are quite extravagant to draw people in.
Student: Everything鈥檚 got to be really dramatic and in capital letters.
Dr Radha Modgil: Then once it鈥檚 got our attention it then causes a really strong emotional reaction in us, so we feel we have to share it. There鈥檚 an area on our brain called the amygdala which actually responds to emotional drive and that becomes over-activated or has increased activity when we鈥檙e reading a fake news story. Studies have shown that actually it only takes one 250th of a second for us to react to emotional content, so basically that means that there鈥檚 no time at all for us to think, respond and critically analyse that information. Fake stories leave us at the mercy of our basic instincts.
Vick Hope: Because of the way it works on our emotions, once you share a fake story it will travel much faster and further than a real one.
Alastair Reed: Everything emotional online travels faster and whether it鈥檚 gossip or whether it鈥檚 sensational lies about someone or something, it鈥檚 much more interesting often than quite boring or complex truths so people are much more likely to share it.
Vick Hope: And the more you see fake stories the more your brain leads you to believe it鈥檚 true.
Student: I think if you see a story more than once you鈥檙e more likely to believe it than if you see it once.
Student: Because surely not this many people would be getting it wrong.
Student: Then you start believing it because you鈥檝e just seen it more and more, and more people are starting to share it and you鈥檙e like 鈥淥h, this must be real鈥.
Claire Milne: And that鈥檚 known as the Illusory Truth Effect. So that鈥檚 basically just the more you hear something repeated the more likely you are to think it鈥檚 true whether it is or whether it isn鈥檛.
Vick Hope: And every time we like or share a fake story it acts like a big thumbs up, telling all our accounts that we want more and that鈥檚 what we get. More and more fake stories.
Student: A story that I thought was real but later found out was fake would have to be the World War Three report.
Student: Conspiracies about 9/11.
Student: The coronavirus apparently coming from bat soup.
Student: But I later found out that maybe that it wasn鈥檛 true.
Student: I kinda felt tricked. How could I believe that was true?
Student: I feel really annoyed because it鈥檚 just a waste of time.
Student: Just a bit stupid that I thought it might have been real.
Student: If you can make up a news story about something that serious then what can we really trust?
Vick Hope: None of us want to be tricked by stories or information that isn鈥檛 real or true. If you feel angry or smug, or indeed anything that gets you right in the stomach it鈥檚 worth taking a second look and asking yourself what is behind the headline? Pause before you share and think if what you鈥檙e sharing is fact or fake.