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Perceiving AI Intervention Does Not Compromise the Persuasive Effect of Fact-Checking

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  • Chae, Je Hoon

    (University of California, Los Angeles)

  • Tewksbury, David

Abstract

Efforts to scale up fact-checking through technology, such as artificial intelligence (AI), are increasingly being suggested and tested. This study examines whether previously observed effects of reading fact-checks remain constant when readers are aware of AI’s involvement in the fact-checking process. We conducted three online experiments (N = 3,978), exposing participants to fact-checks identified as either human-generated or AI-assisted, simulating cases where AI fully generates the fact-check or automatically retrieves human fact-checks. Our findings indicate that the persuasive effect of fact-checking, specifically in increasing truth discernment, persists even among participants without a positive prior attitude toward AI. Additionally, in some cases, awareness of AI’s role reduced perceived political bias in fact-checks among Republicans. Finally, neither AI-generated nor human fact-checks significantly affected participants’ feelings toward or their perceptions of the competence of the targeted politicians.

Suggested Citation

  • Chae, Je Hoon & Tewksbury, David, 2024. "Perceiving AI Intervention Does Not Compromise the Persuasive Effect of Fact-Checking," OSF Preprints mkd6f, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:osfxxx:mkd6f
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/mkd6f
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