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The Corrective Effect of Fact-Checking and Hostile Media Perceptions: A Three-Way Interaction Model between Social Media News Usage and Political Misperceptions

Authors
Lin, HanLee, JanggeunWang, YiKim, Yonghwan
Issue Date
Sep-2025
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE
Keywords
Fact-checking; fake news; hostile media perceptions; political misperception; three-way interaction; moderated moderation model
Citation
Digital Journalism, v.13, no.8, pp 1461 - 1481
Pages
21
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Digital Journalism
Volume
13
Number
8
Start Page
1461
End Page
1481
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/26251
DOI
10.1080/21670811.2024.2383889
ISSN
2167-0811
2167-082X
Abstract
With the proliferation of fake news and misinformation, fact-checking journalism is booming worldwide. However, whether its corrective effect is still valid and generalizable in daily news consumption settings outside the laboratory requires further investigation. In addition, some partisans argue that the content of fact-checking news has a partisan bias that makes it unfavorable to particular political figures or parties. This perceived bias is beginning to take root in some citizens' minds. Using data from a national survey during the 2022 Korean presidential election (N = 948), we explore whether hostile media perception theory extends to biased perceptions of fact-checking news and affects its corrective effect. The results of the three-way interaction model indicate that exposure to fact-checking news helps reduce citizens' belief in political misinformation when using social media news. However, perceived hostility to fact-checking news reduces the corrective effect of fact-checking. Specifically, those who are frequently exposed to fact-checking news but have a strong hostile media perception related to fact-checking news are less likely to assess misinformation more accurately than those with low perceived hostility when using social media news. The implications and limitations of this study are discussed.
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College of the Social Science (Department of Social Communication)
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