6,483
Views
11
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Degrees of deception: the effects of different types of COVID-19 misinformation and the effectiveness of corrective information in crisis times

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon &
Pages 1699-1715 | Received 16 Aug 2021, Accepted 16 Dec 2021, Published online: 31 Dec 2021

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (4)

Francesco Bailo, Amelia Johns & Marian-Andrei Rizoiu. (2023) Riding information crises: the performance of far-right Twitter users in Australia during the 2019–2020 bushfires and the COVID-19 pandemic. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-19.
Read now
Xinyan Zhao & Stephanie J. Tsang. (2023) How People Process Different Types of Health Misinformation: Roles of Content Falsity and Evidence Type. Health Communication 0:0, pages 1-13.
Read now
Femke Geusens, Gaëlle Ouvrein & Soetkin Remen. (2023) #Cancelled: A qualitative content analysis of cancel culture in the YouTube beauty community. The Social Science Journal 0:0, pages 1-17.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (7)

Clara Christner. (2023) Does credibility become trivial when the message is right? Populist radical-right attitudes, perceived message credibility, and the spread of disinformation . Communications 0:0.
Crossref
Lindsey A Harvell-Bowman. (2023) Exploring the Existential Implications of COVID-19 in Health Communication. American Behavioral Scientist, pages 000276422311640.
Crossref
Shinichi Yamaguchi & Tsukasa Tanihara. (2023) Relationship between misinformation spreading behaviour and true/false judgments and literacy: an empirical analysis of COVID-19 vaccine and political misinformation in Japan. Global Knowledge, Memory and Communication.
Crossref
Sabrina Heike Kessler & Edda Humprecht. (2023) COVID-19 misinformation on YouTube: An analysis of its impact and subsequent online information searches for verification. DIGITAL HEALTH 9, pages 205520762311771.
Crossref
Richard Rogers, Minqi Pan, Sara E. Hartigan, Yi-Ting Chang & Jordan E. Donson. (2022) Workplace Deceptions During the Pandemic: Differences in Conspiracy Beliefs, Psychological Functioning, and Covid-19 Experiences. Psychological Reports, pages 003329412211446.
Crossref
Rafael S. Medina Ferreira, Ana Paula Couto da Silva & Fabricio Murai. (2022) Risk Perception and Misinformation in Brazilian Twitter during COVID-19 Infodemic. Risk Perception and Misinformation in Brazilian Twitter during COVID-19 Infodemic.
Sophie Morosoli, Peter Van Aelst & Patrick van Erkel. (2022) To Convince, to Provoke or to Entertain? A Study on Individual Motivations behind Engaging with Conspiracy Theories Online . Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 28:4, pages 1030-1059.
Crossref