Identity and inequality misperceptions, demographic determinants and efficacy of corrective measures
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Peren Arin, K.; Mazrekaj, Deni; Thum, Marcel; Lacomba Arias, Juan Antonio; Lagos García, Francisco MiguelEditorial
Scientific Reports
Materia
Misinformation Perception bias Immigration
Fecha
2024-05-29Referencia bibliográfica
Peren Arin, K. et. al. Sci Rep 14, 12300 (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-62046-7]
Patrocinador
Projekt DEALResumen
By conducting two waves of large-scale surveys in the United Kingdom and Germany, we investigate
the determinants of identity and inequality misperceptions. We first show that people substantially
overestimate the share of immigrants, Muslims, people under the poverty line, and the income share
of the richest. Moreover, women, lower-income, and lower-educated respondents generally have
higher misperceptions. Only income share misperceptions are associated more with people who place
themselves on the left of the political spectrum. In contrast, the other three misperceptions are more
prevalent among those who place themselves to the right. We then attempt to correct misperceptions
by conducting a classic controlled experiment. Specifically, we randomly assign respondents into a
treatment group informed about their initial misperceptions and a control group left uninformed.
Our results indicate that information treatments had some corrective effects on misperceptions
in Germany but were ineffective in the United Kingdom. Moreover, information treatments in
Germany were more effective for men, centrists, and highly educated respondents. There is also no
evidence of spill-over effects: correcting one misperception does not have corrective effects for the
other misperceptions.