The spread of inaccurate and misleading information may alter behaviours and complicate crisis management, especially during an emergency like the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper aims to investigate information diffusion during the COVID-19 pandemic by evaluating news consumption on YouTube. First, we analyse more than 2 million users' engagement with 13,000 videos released by 68 YouTube channels, labelled with a political bias and fact-checking index. Then, we study the relationship between each user\~Os political preference and their consumption of questionable (i.e., poorly fact-checked) and reliable information. Our results, quantified using measures from information theory, provide evidence for the existence of echo chambers across two dimensions represented by political bias and the trustworthiness of information channels. We observe that the echo chamber structure cannot be reproduced after properly randomising the users' interaction patterns. Moreover, we observe a relation between the political bias of users and their tendency to consume highly questionable news.
翻译:传播不准确和误导性信息可能会改变行为,使危机管理复杂化,特别是在像COVID-19大流行这样的紧急情况下。本文件的目的是通过评价YouTube上的新闻消耗量,调查COVID-19大流行期间的信息传播情况。首先,我们分析超过200万用户与68个YouTube频道发行的13 000个视频的接触情况,这些视频被贴上了政治偏见和事实核对索引标签。然后,我们研究每个用户的政治偏好与他们使用可疑(例如,事实检查不力)和可靠信息之间的关系。我们利用信息理论的措施量化的结果,提供了以政治偏见和信息渠道的可信赖性为代表的两个方面存在的回声室的证据。我们观察到,在对用户的互动模式进行适当随机排序后,回声室结构无法复制。此外,我们观察用户的政治偏好与他们消费高度可疑新闻的趋势之间的关系。