Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect

Being inherently social, humans often discuss events with others. Research reveals that one’s memory may become less accurate after exposure to misinformation. This is known as the misinformation effect, which is a phenomenon when an individual’s memory of a witnessed event is altered after expos...

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Main Author: Ang, Jia Yi
Other Authors: Rebecca Nichols
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168508
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1685082023-06-18T15:32:24Z Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect Ang, Jia Yi Rebecca Nichols School of Social Sciences r.nichols@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Being inherently social, humans often discuss events with others. Research reveals that one’s memory may become less accurate after exposure to misinformation. This is known as the misinformation effect, which is a phenomenon when an individual’s memory of a witnessed event is altered after exposure to post-event misinformation. Given characteristics of social sources of misinformation can influence one’s susceptibility to the misinformation effect, the present study investigated the influence of social characteristics such as competence and ingroup/outgroup membership of an information source on the misinformation effect. Participants were assigned to groups using a minimal group procedure and completed a classic misinformation paradigm. The competence of the misinformation source was manipulated through a filler task. The results found a lack of a main effect of ingroup/outgroup membership on the proportion of robust false memories but reported a main effect of competence and interaction effect of both variables. Specifically, participants displayed a significantly higher proportion of robust false memories when the misinformation source was of low competence, and displayed the highest proportion of robust false memories when the misinformation source was also from an outgroup, contrary to the hypotheses. The present study offers insight into the interaction of social characteristics on the misinformation effect, given that in real-world scenarios social sources of information likely have multiple features which may affect the memory of a witnessed event. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2023-06-13T08:14:07Z 2023-06-13T08:14:07Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Ang, J. Y. (2023). Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168508 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168508 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Ang, Jia Yi
Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
description Being inherently social, humans often discuss events with others. Research reveals that one’s memory may become less accurate after exposure to misinformation. This is known as the misinformation effect, which is a phenomenon when an individual’s memory of a witnessed event is altered after exposure to post-event misinformation. Given characteristics of social sources of misinformation can influence one’s susceptibility to the misinformation effect, the present study investigated the influence of social characteristics such as competence and ingroup/outgroup membership of an information source on the misinformation effect. Participants were assigned to groups using a minimal group procedure and completed a classic misinformation paradigm. The competence of the misinformation source was manipulated through a filler task. The results found a lack of a main effect of ingroup/outgroup membership on the proportion of robust false memories but reported a main effect of competence and interaction effect of both variables. Specifically, participants displayed a significantly higher proportion of robust false memories when the misinformation source was of low competence, and displayed the highest proportion of robust false memories when the misinformation source was also from an outgroup, contrary to the hypotheses. The present study offers insight into the interaction of social characteristics on the misinformation effect, given that in real-world scenarios social sources of information likely have multiple features which may affect the memory of a witnessed event.
author2 Rebecca Nichols
author_facet Rebecca Nichols
Ang, Jia Yi
format Final Year Project
author Ang, Jia Yi
author_sort Ang, Jia Yi
title Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
title_short Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
title_full Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
title_fullStr Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
title_full_unstemmed Ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
title_sort ingroup/outgroup membership and competence: investigating the influence on the misinformation effect
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168508
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