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Apuntes
Print version ISSN 0252-1865On-line version ISSN 2223-1757
Abstract
BRENES PERALTA, Carlos; PEREZ SANCHEZ, Rolando and SILES, Ignacio. Individual predictors of COVID-19 disinformation detection and sharing via WhatsApp. Apuntes [online]. 2024, vol.51, n.96, pp.129-162. Epub Jan 31, 2024. ISSN 0252-1865. http://dx.doi.org/10.21678/apuntes.96.1985.
This study examines cognitive, socio-political, and socio-demographic predictors of the evaluation and willingness to share disinformation about COVID-19 via WhatsApp. Using an online survey, a convenience sample of 553 Costa Rican adults were exposed to disinformation about vaccines and the state’s response to the pandemic. Results show that people who support authoritarian, conservative and pro-state ideologies, and those with low reflective thinking, were more likely to believe and share disinformation. Moreover, among people with low reflective thinking, older people were more likely to detect disinformation. Finally, highly religious individuals and younger conservatives with lower education expressed more willingness to share disinformation.
Keywords : disinformation; political ideology; cognition; evaluation; sharing; COVID-19.