Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 May, 2014 03:20 PM
    Are you among those who love tweeting but somewhat wary of information via tweets from others? Join the 'Millennial Generation' that has a “healthy mistrust” of the information they read on Twitter.
     
    “Nearly anyone can start a Twitter account and post 140 characters of information at a time, bogus or not, a fact participants seemed to grasp,” Kimberly Fenn, an assistant professor of psychology at Michigan State University, was quoted as saying.
     
    During the study, researchers showed 74 undergraduates in their 20s a series of images on a computer that depicted a story of a man robbing a car.
     
    False information about the story was then presented in a scrolling text feed resembling Twitter feed.
     
    The test was to see if students integrated the bogus information into their minds - called “false memory”.
     
    The results showed that when the participants read the 'Twitter' feed, they were much less likely to form false memories about the story.
     
    It suggests that young people are somewhat wary of information that comes from Twitter, Fenn added.
     
    The researchers advise teenagers to take into account the medium of the message when integrating information into memory, said the study that appeared in the journal Psychonomic Bulletin.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Spectacular! Watch how earth looks from space

    Spectacular! Watch how earth looks from space
    Everyone has dreamt of looking at the ‘Blue Plant’ from up there. Now you can watch earth live - as viewed from space.

    Spectacular! Watch how earth looks from space

    Now, a perfume radar to sense new scents

    Now, a perfume radar to sense new scents
    Creating those extravagant perfumes that exude an aura of elegance around those who wear them may no longer be the fiefdom of a few experts.

    Now, a perfume radar to sense new scents

    Virtual humans to transform global health care soon

    Virtual humans to transform global health care soon
    Expensive experimental tests often prescribed by physicians may soon become things of the past as scientists have now come closer to creating an in silico replica of the human body that would enable the virtual testing of bespoke treatments.

    Virtual humans to transform global health care soon

    Amazing! An Umbrella that gives you rain data via smart phone!

    Amazing! An Umbrella that gives you rain data via smart phone!
    Though rains are still some days away, buying this umbrella that can collect rain data won't be a bad idea.

    Amazing! An Umbrella that gives you rain data via smart phone!

    Now, a disposable 'coffee machine' at your service

    Now, a disposable 'coffee machine' at your service
    If a cup of filter coffee is what you need the most to get your day started, you no longer have to worry about travelling to the nearest coffee shop. A Danish designer has come up with a disposable coffee machine that works just like a tea bag for coffee.

    Now, a disposable 'coffee machine' at your service

    Men reinforce gender stereotypes even in online avatars

    Men reinforce gender stereotypes even in online avatars
    Even when men take female avatars in some video games, they do not try to mask their gender and instead reinforce gender stereotypes through their gestures, a study showed.

    Men reinforce gender stereotypes even in online avatars