• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

“Psychological Booster Shots” Could Inoculate Against Misinformation

March 11, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

We live in a world rampant with misinformation, and many of us are just shockingly ill-equipped to defend against it. Luckily, a new study has found a countermeasure – and much like our physical health, it all comes down to maintaining your booster shots.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Misinformation is a threat to society and the functioning of democracies worldwide,” the paper begins. “It is shown to have impacted a wide variety of critical issues such as vaccine uptake, support for mitigation of anthropogenic global warming, and political elections. Furthermore, misinformation has also been linked to real-world violence, such as mob violence in India and the burning of 5G installations.”

So, the question is: how do we combat it? Most of the work so far has focused on post-hoc measures – debunking pseudoscience, for example, or fact-checking political lies. Those can be pretty effective, under the right circumstances – but just as a measles vaccine is hugely preferable to suffering through the disease, perhaps a more proactive approach is needed to protect against all the bullshit surrounding us today.

To test this hypothesis, researchers conducted five large-scale experiments testing three different types of intervention on more than 11,000 participants. Some were text-based, where study participants read a message explaining common misinformation tactics; others were video-based, where they watched short clips covering how emotionally manipulative rhetoric is used to mislead. Finally, there were game-based interventions, where participants played Bad News, a free browser game in which players take on the role of a fake news producer – basically, letting them figure out for themselves how and why common misinformation techniques are used in the wild.

But would such “inoculation” measures be effective? Well, yes and no: when exposed to misinformation after the fact, participants were certainly better able to detect and resist it – but not for all that long. “The effect of specific text-based interventions can stay intact for about a month,” the researchers discovered, “whereas the effects for the gamified and video-based interventions lost significance within the first two weeks.”

While that may sound like bad news, the team suggests an obvious solution: booster shots. To go back to the physical health analogy: if misinformation is a virus, then our “immune systems” are our memory – and the equivalent of your annual flu shot? Just a regular reminder of how bad actors work.

“Just as medical booster shots enhance immunity, psychological booster shots can strengthen people’s resistance to misinformation over time,” explained Rakoen Maertens, a researcher in the University of Oxford’s Department of Experimental Psychology and lead researcher on the project, in a statement. “By integrating memory-boosting techniques into public education and digital literacy programs, we can help people retain these critical skills for much longer.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Even better: the benefits may be cumulative. “Multiple booster interventions may be needed to counteract misinformation in real world scenarios,” the paper admits, “but also […] forgetting may flatten out when enough booster interventions are provided. In other words, in line with what would be expected from the memory literature, long-term retention could be achieved through repeated inoculation.”

It’s much more than just a neat insight into how our brains retain information – although it is indeed that. The discovery that misinformation can be thwarted with short-term interventions, rather than purely through wholesale policy changes, means far more ways to tackle the problem – ones that are easy to roll out, and easy to take part in.

“Misinformation researchers would benefit from integrating knowledge from the cognitive science of memory to design better psychological interventions that can counter misinformation durably over time and at-scale,” the team writes.

Using their research, they suggest, “researchers and practitioners can develop ways to increase the long-term effectiveness of interventions by focusing on boosting memory.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The paper is published in the journal Nature Communications.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Evolito’s electric motors look set to take off in aerospace where YASA left off in automotive
  2. Afghan girls stuck at home, waiting for Taliban plan to re-open schools
  3. This Is What Yesterday’s Partial Solar Eclipse Looked Like From Space
  4. Can We Learn To Be Happier? Find Out More In Issue 14 Of CURIOUS – Out Now

Source Link: "Psychological Booster Shots" Could Inoculate Against Misinformation

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Approach For Interstellar Navigation Was Tested On A Spacecraft 9 Billion Kilometers Away
  • For Only The Second Recorded Time, Two Novae Are Visible With The Naked Eye At Once
  • Long-Lost Ancient Egyptian City Ruled By Cobra Goddess Discovered In Nile Delta
  • Much Maligned Norwegian Lemming Is One Of The Newest Mammal Species On Earth
  • Where Are The Real Geographical Centers Of All The Continents?
  • New Species Of South African Rain Frog Discovered, And It’s Absolutely Fuming About It
  • Love Cheese But Hate Nightmares? Bad News, It Looks Like The Two Really Are Related
  • Project Hail Mary Trailer First Look: What Would Happen If The Sun Got Darker?
  • Newly Discovered Cell Structure Might Hold Key To Understanding Devastating Genetic Disorders
  • What Is Kakeya’s Needle Problem, And Why Do We Want To Solve It?
  • “I Wasn’t Prepared For The Sheer Number Of Them”: Cave Of Mummified Never-Before-Seen Eyeless Invertebrates Amazes Scientists
  • Asteroid Day At 10: How The World Is More Prepared Than Ever To Face Celestial Threats
  • What Happened When A New Zealand Man Fell Butt-First Onto A Powerful Air Hose
  • Ancient DNA Confirms Women’s Unexpected Status In One Of The Oldest Known Neolithic Settlements
  • Earth’s Weather Satellites Catch Cloud Changes… On Venus
  • Scientists Find Common Factors In People Who Have “Out-Of-Body” Experiences
  • Shocking Photos Reveal Extent Of Overfishing’s Impact On “Shrinking” Cod
  • Direct Fusion Drive Could Take Us To Sedna During Its Closest Approach In 11,000 Years
  • Earth’s Energy Imbalance Is More Than Double What It Should Be – And We Don’t Know Why
  • We May Have Misjudged A Fundamental Fact About The Cambrian Explosion
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version