82 results
How populist messages by media actors, political actors, and readers are distributed via online news articles, and reader comments during election campaigns in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and France
A study based on 50 interviews with Spanish journalists examines how they respond to commercial pressure from newspapers’ advertisers
A piece of automated content analysis on a corpus of articles covering the European Commission from 1992 to 2016
A case study of media independence and press-state relationship based on coverage of migration in the United Kingdom
This study suggests a way to determine the credibility of newspaper articles by developing collectively agreed indicators. The aim is to allow credible content to lead to greater collaboration and data-sharing across initiatives. As proof-of-concept, it presents a dataset of 40 articles of varying credibility annotated with these indicators
Drawing on the findings of two projects awarded by the European Commission, the paper examines the sources of the threats hindering media freedom in Europe
A complaint to the European Ombudsman about EU vs Disinfo
MIT researchers investigated the difference in the diffusion of true and false news on Twitter
Can a game in which participants create a fake news article help them spot misinformation in the real world? Researchers made an experiment in a high school in the Netherlands
The study analyzes misinformation, disinformation, and “fake news” using a new theoretical framework and a unique research design integrating survey data and analysis of observed news sharing behaviors on social media in the United Kingdom. The research is designed of combination analysis of news media content, self-reports from relevant groups of social media users, and digital trace data