The Trigger Effect: Cognitive Biases and Fake News
Abstract
This research study focuses on the problem of populistic propaganda
online. In particular, this research study provides three case studies
gathered in a Facebook Group of the Italian populistic movement
Movimento 5 Stelle.
On the one hand, the three case studies provide three powerful
counterexamples to the thesis that online media are purposeful
aggregator of people. In fact, this research study finds that online media
are the perfect environment for populism to thrive. For online media
seem to foster the aggregation of people into groups whose main
common denominator is the total refusal of anything that opposes the
groups’ views. On this basis, this paper provides evidence that online
media may impoverish democratic confrontation.
On the other hand, this paper finds that the one of the causes of the rapid
rise of populistic movements in Western countries might also be related
to the problem of cognitive biases. Indeed, the case studies presented in
the paper posit the existence of something that is addressed as the
trigger effect, i.e. agents’ tendency to react impulsively to any kind of
content that fits agent’s views about current events. Specifically, this
research study finds that the activation of the trigger effect might be a
direct consequence of the activation of the narrow framing bias and of
the anchoring heuristic in presence of fake news.
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