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3.3.1: Truth, Truth Decay, and Trust

  • Page ID
    246416
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    illustration of a gray shark on a black background saying "TRUST ME" in dripping red capital lettersTruth and Trust

    A 2020 study from Project Information Literacy confirms that the way information is delivered today—with opinion and propaganda mingled with traditional news sources, and with algorithms highlighting sources based on engagement rather than quality—has left many college students concerned about the trustworthiness of online content. Students reported that it was difficult to know where to place their trust when credible sources are buried by a deluge of poorer-quality content and misinformation. One student noted that “it’s not that we’re lacking credible information. It’s that we’re drowning in like a sea of all these different points out there” (Head et al, 2020, p. 20).

    “This is happening at a time when falsehoods proliferate and trust in truth-seeking institutions is being undermined. Even the very existence of truth itself has come into question….People no longer know what to believe or on what grounds we can determine what is true” (Head et al, 2020 pp. 11, 36).

    Indeed, in 2016, Oxford Dictionaries selected post-truth as the Word of the Year, defining it as: “relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief” (Oxford word of the year, 2016).

    Truth Decay

    The nonpartisan, nonprofit research organization the RAND Corporation describes as truth decay "the diminishing role of facts and analysis in American public life"

    and describes its four key characteristics as:

    1. Increasing disagreement about facts and analytical interpretations of facts and data
    2. A blurring of the line between opinion and fact
    3. The increasing relative volume and resulting influence of opinion and personal experience over fact
    4. Declining trust in formerly respected sources of facts (RAND, 2018)

    The video [3:11] below explains how truth decay happens.

    For more in-depth information about truth decay, download the full RAND report, Truth Decay: An Initial Exploration of the Diminishing Role of Facts and Analysis in American Public Life for free, or watch the 12-minute Truth Decay video based on the report.


    Sources

    Head, A.J., Fister, B., & MacMillan, M. (2020, Jan 15). Information literacy in the age of algorithms. Project Information Literacy. Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

    Image: Line Mind by ElisaRiva on Pixabay

    Image: Trust shark balloon prompt by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

    Kavanagh, J. & Rich, M.D. (2018, Jan 16). Truth decay: An initial exploration of the diminishing role of facts and analysis in American public life. RAND.

    Oxford word of the year 2016. (2016). Oxford Languages, Oxford University Press.

    RAND. (2018, May 16). How truth decay happens. YouTube.


    3.3.1: Truth, Truth Decay, and Trust is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Ellen Carey.