Restoring trust in truth-seekers: Effects of op/eds defending journalism and justice

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Abstract

A healthy democracy requires trust that people can be impartial in important truth-seeking institutions including journalism, justice, and science. Recently some U.S. elites have adopted alarmingly extreme rhetoric against truth-seekers, denouncing mainstream journalism as fake news, criminal investigations as partisan witch-hunts, climate science as a hoax, and career civil servants as a deep state conspiracy. In response, some news organizations have taken the unusual step of publishing op/eds defending these institutions. Two experiments tested effects of such op/eds. In study 1, participants spent twelve days using a purpose-built news portal containing real, timely news with random assignment to the availability of real, timely op/eds defending impartiality of truth-seekers. These op/eds increased trust in truth-seeking institutions and increased the belief that people can serve as impartial professionals. Study 2 replicated this with a laboratory experiment assigning video op/ed exposure instead of text op/ed availability while adding several outcomes.

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Pingree, R. J., Santia, M., Bryanov, K., & Watson, B. K. (2021). Restoring trust in truth-seekers: Effects of op/eds defending journalism and justice. PLoS ONE, 16(5 May). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251284

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