“Since the 2016 U.S. presidential election, many thousands of papers have been published about the dangers of false information propagating on social media,” says Watts. “But what this literature has almost universally overlooked is the related danger of information that is merely biased. That’s what we look at here in the context of COVID vaccines.”
Citaion:
"How unflagged, factual content drives vaccine hesitancy," Penn Today, June 7, 2024
Related Study:
Jennifer Allen et al. Quantifying the impact of misinformation and vaccine-skeptical content on Facebook. Science384, eadk3451 (2024). DOI: 10.1126/science.adk3451