Misinformation Harms: A Tale of Two Humanitarian Crises

Thi Tran The University of Texas at San Antonio ; Rohit Valecha The University of Texas at San Antonio ; Paul Rad The University of Texas at San Antonio ; H. Raghav Rao The University of Texas at San Antonio

Abstract

Research problem: During humanitarian crises, communities of people face various types of dangers. To counter the dangers, they need information in a short period. Such need creates the opportunity for misinformation. Such misinformation can result in information harms that can generate short- or long-term consequences. Literature review: Prior researchers have tackled the situation by using technical or behavioral approaches. Research question: What are the harms from misinformation? We propose a taxonomy of 15 information harms grouped in 8 categories and assess the perception of risk regarding the harms through a survey of respondents who have experienced crisis response situations. Methodology: This paper examines two scenarios, the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and the 2017 Oroville Dam evacuation order crises, through two dimensions: Likelihood of occurrence and Level of impacts of the harms. Results and conclusions: Findings are presented through visualization and test results for significant differences of harms between scenarios. Similar groups of harms are identified with different severity levels based on post hoc analyses: those with 1. high likelihood and low impact (psychological and confusion harms), 2. low likelihood and low impact (reputation and privacy harms), and 3. low likelihood and high impact (physical, financial, safety, and social harms). In addition to establishing the taxonomy of misinformation harms, findings will have practical value in emergency response and recovery activities to effectively prioritize resources to minimize specific harms from misinformation in crises. Further research directions are also discussed.

Journal
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
Published
2020-12-01
DOI
10.1109/tpc.2020.3029685
CompPile
Open Access
Closed
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (2)

  1. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
  2. Journal of Business and Technical Communication

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