| Literature DB >> 27255736 |
Ramona Ludolph1, Ahmed Allam, Peter J Schulz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One of people's major motives for going online is the search for health-related information. Most consumers start their search with a general search engine but are unaware of the fact that its sorting and ranking criteria do not mirror information quality. This misconception can lead to distorted search outcomes, especially when the information processing is characterized by heuristic principles and resulting cognitive biases instead of a systematic elaboration. As vaccination opponents are vocal on the Web, the chance of encountering their non‒evidence-based views on immunization is high. Therefore, biased information processing in this context can cause subsequent impaired judgment and decision making. A technological debiasing strategy could counter this by changing people's search environment.Entities:
Keywords: debiasing; health communication; information processing; information seeking; online health information search; search behavior; search engine; vaccination
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27255736 PMCID: PMC4911515 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.5430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Experimental design and group allocation.
| Knowledge graph box manipulation | Availability of basic information | |||
| Comprehensible basic information (WHO) | Hardly comprehensible basic information (Wikipedia) | No basic information | ||
| Warning of the presence of false information | ||||
| No warning | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 6 (Control group) | |
| Warning present | Group 4 | Group 5 | Group 3 | |
Figure 1Search result template mimicking Google’s search used during the experiment.
Figure 2Three examples of the knowledge graph box as it appeared on the screen during the search: (A) Group 1 (comprehensible information from WHO), (B) Group 2 (hardly comprehensible information from Wikipedia), (C) Group 3 (warning message).
Figure 3Posttest knowledge about vaccination as dependent on presence of a warning and comprehensibility level of basic information.
Exploratory factor analysis of beliefs and attitudes measures.
| Pattern matrixa | Factor loadings | ||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| In your opinion, how likely is the occurrence of serious side effects after a child got vaccinated? | 0.85b | ||
| When I read about the possible side effects of vaccination on the websites, I felt worried. | 0.82b | ||
| When recommending vaccination, physicians do not pay enough attention to the possible side effects. | 0.79b | ||
| In your opinion, how likely is the occurrence of serious side effects after an adult got vaccinated? | 0.77b | ||
| When I read what the websites said about the effectiveness of vaccination, I felt worried. | 0.76b | ||
| Many vaccinations today do more harm than good. | 0.75b | ||
| Many of the vaccinations recommended today are redundant because the disease is almost extinct. | 0.64b | ||
| Vaccination often does not fully protect against a disease. | 0.52b | ||
| Thinking about the 10 minutes you spent searching for information on vaccination: Has the search made you more skeptical about vaccination or has the experience increased your confidence in it? | -0.38 | ||
| How convincing did you find the websites you looked at during your search? | 0.91b | ||
| The information on the websites I read was credible. | 0.88b | ||
| How much do you trust the information about vaccination you found on the websites before? | 0.86b | ||
| Was the information you found on the websites relevant? | 0.73b | ||
| How much do you trust Google to provide you with good information? | 0.63b | ||
| The information about vaccination I have just read on the websites was comprehensible for me. | 0.52b | ||
| If it weren’t for vaccination, many people would have a shorter lifespan today than they do. | 0.86b | ||
| People who opt out of vaccination do not only put themselves at risk, but also other people. | 0.74b | ||
| Vaccination is one of the greatest medical breakthroughs affecting our lives. | 0.74b | ||
| In my opinion, people should follow the advice to get vaccinated. | 0.60b | ||
aExtraction method: maximum likelihood. Rotation method: Promax with Kaiser normalization.
bLoading ~ 0.4.
Figure 4Skepticism/fear of vaccination side effects as dependent on presence of a warning and comprehensibility level of basic information.
Figure 5Attitude toward information quality as dependent on presence of a warning and comprehensibility level of basic information.
Figure 6Acknowledgment of vaccination benefits as dependent on presence of a warning and comprehensibility level of basic information.