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Social media amplification loops and false alarms : towards a sociotechnical understanding of misinformation during emergencies

Authors
  • Eriksson Krutrök, Moa
  • Lindgren, Simon
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2022
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1080/10714421.2022.2035165
OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-192216
Source
DiVA - Academic Archive On-line
Keywords
Language
English
License
Green
External links

Abstract

In the immediate aftermath of crisis events, there is a pressing demand among the public for information about what is unfolding. In such moments "information holes" occur, people and organizations collaborate to try to fill these in real time by sharing information. In this article, we approach such gaps not merely as the product of the actual lack of information, but as generated by the algorithmically underpinned social media platforms as such, and by the user behaviors that they proliferate. The lack of information is the result of the noisy and fragmented patchwork of information that social media platforms can generate. In this paper, we draw on a case study of one particular case of a false terrorism alarm and its unfolding on Twitter, that took place in London's Oxford Circus underground station in November of 2017. Using a combination of computational and interpretive methods – analyzing social network structure as well as textual expressions – we find that certain logics of platforms may affect emergency management and the work of emergency responders negatively.

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