Disinformation as a Widespread Problem and Vulnerability Factors Toward it: Evidence From a Quasi-Experimental Survey in Spain

Authors

  • Roberto Gelado-Marcos CEU San Pablo University
  • Plácido Moreno-Felices CEU San Pablo University
  • Belén Puebla-Martínez Rey Juan Carlos University

Keywords:

disinformation, vulnerability, fake news, social media, Spain

Abstract

In recent years, several institutions have alerted the effects of information disorders while struggling to handle the problem effectively. Our investigation triangulates between qualitative and quantitative approaches: on the one hand, focus groups adapted to the digital landscape (which many have hinted is an environment naturally favoring disinformation) were used; on the other, a quasi-experimental survey was conducted with 4,351 stratified respondents. The results provide evidence-based data that both confirm the widespread nature of vulnerability—more than half of the Spanish population presents a relevant degree of vulnerability toward disinformation—and spot specific groups that may require targeted actions to ease the effects of information disorders.

Author Biographies

Roberto Gelado-Marcos, CEU San Pablo University

Postal address Universidad CEU San Pablo, Paseo Juan XXIII, 3 - 28040 Madrid, SpainPhone number +34 655239761ORCID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4387-5347  Adjunct Professor and Deputy Vicerector at CEU San Pablo University (Madrid, Spain), where he lectures in Communication Theory, History of Journalism and Audio Visual Narrative. PhD in Communication & Strategic Management of Knowledge (Pontificia University, Salamanca, 2012) & MA in Global Media (University of East London, 2005), he has written more than forty publications in both indexed journals and publishing houses and completed research and teaching stays at the universities of Cambridge, Westminster and Columbia, amongst others. He is the PI of the CEU branch of IBERIFIER, one of the eight research hubs of the European Digital Media Observatory, which will run between September 2021 and February 2024.

Plácido Moreno-Felices, CEU San Pablo University

ORCID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0912-2763  PhD in Journalism from the CEU San Pablo University of Madrid and an MBA from the Madrid School of Industrial Organization (EOI). Currently, he is an honorary assistant professor (specialized in Technology & New Media). He has studied the phenomenon of Media Convergence since 1998. His current lines of research are the digital transformation of the Media industry (ICOIDI research group) and the study of the conditioning factors of disinformation in vulnerable groups (specifically the uses and effects of disinformation). As guest researcher of INECO (Research Group on Innovation, Education and Communication: Rey Juan Carlos University Madrid Spain) has participated in the recent research: Study of the conditioning factors of misinformation. Proposal of solutions against its impact based on vulnerability degrees of the analyzed groups (2020), funded by Facebook and Fundación Luca de Tena. He has worked as an international consultant for WAN-IFRA (World Association of Newspapers and News Editors) in digital transformation projects for media companies and is a journalist specialized in ICT. He is the author of various academic articles, book chapters and the book: Reinventing the newspaper: A strategy for the survival of the daily press (2009).

Belén Puebla-Martínez, Rey Juan Carlos University

ORCID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1481-4238 Professor and researcher at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos. PhD in Communication Sciences (URJC), and BA in Journalism and Audio Visual Communication (URJC). She has taught courses in the degrees of Communication and Primary Education, both at URJC and in Complutense University (Madrid). She specializes in the study of press and TV media, the study of analytical research methods in social communication and innovative teaching skills. She is the PI of the URJC branch of IBERIFIER.

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Published

2022-07-11

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Articles