Automated Fact-Checking to Support Professional Practices: Systematic Literature Review and Meta-Analysis

Authors

  • Laurence Dierickx University of Bergen
  • Carl-Gustav Lindén University of Bergen
  • Andreas Lothe Opdahl University of Bergen

Keywords:

fact-checking, journalism, artificial intelligence, systematic literature review, meta-analysis

Abstract

Fact-checking is a time-consuming process that automation can potentially make more efficient. This study provides a comprehensive, multidisciplinary state of the art that considers a holistic and sociotechnical approach to studying automated fact-checking (AFC) from a journalistic perspective. It identifies how AFC tools, as boundary objects, connect with their end users. The findings highlight that most research in AFC focuses on providing technological solutions to solve the multidimensional social problem of information disorder, and they also indicate the promise of human-machine teaming. This suggests that the cursor can be moved from a technological point of view toward a social one, provided that a relationship of confidence is established between the communities—developers and fact-checkers/journalists—involved from either side of the tool. Although the conditions of use of a technological artifact are multifaceted, the reliability of the results that it provides participates in building such a trust-based relationship.

Author Biographies

Laurence Dierickx, University of Bergen

Post-doctoral researcher

Carl-Gustav Lindén, University of Bergen

Professor

Andreas Lothe Opdahl, University of Bergen

Professor

Downloads

Published

2023-08-15

Issue

Section

Articles