Polarisation

What is
Polarisation?

Polarisation encourages people to see issues as a conflict between opposing groups, often exaggerating differences while downplaying common ground.

How to be sure it's Polarisation?

To spot it, look for content that frames people as being on one side or the other, presents only two options, or portrays one group as entirely right or wrong. Examples include posts that encourage hostility towards people with different views.

Study under review - coming soon

Project Description

Truth Labs for Education is a collaboration between Cambridge University, the University of Bristol, and Google Jigsaw. We created a series of short videos designed to help people resist unwanted persuasion online. The videos are rooted in a framework from social psychology called inoculation theory, which posits that by exposing people to a weakened dose of a persuasive argument or technique and pre-emptively refuting it, they develop psychological resistance against future manipulative persuasion attempts.

We created 5 videos, each of which “inoculates” people against a particular manipulation technique or misleading rhetorical device commonly encountered online: ad hominem attacks, using emotional language to evoke fear or outrage, false dichotomies, incoherence, and scapegoating.