the news coverage of AIDS, some of which was considered “deliberate misinformation” (Price and Hsu 1992; Bird 1996). However, “fake news,” currently the most widespread term of those analyzed, was not used until 2005 (Baym 2005). The texts that appear in this paragraph and other similar ones have been excluded from the qualitative analysis of this chapter as they lack an explicit methodology, but they must be mentioned because they show the existence of a historical debate within the journalistic profession on the veracity of content, although that concern has intensified and been addressed with greater scientific rigor more recently. The current stage has also favored the emergence of new concepts, such as “junk news,” which refers to sources that deliberately publish misleading, deceptive, or incorrect information packaged as real news (Bradshaw et al. 2020), or “news-ness,” the extent to which audiences characterize specific content as news (Edgerly and Vraga 2020).
In this context there is a predominance of articles with multiple authorship (70%), a decision that is probably justified by the complexity of the phenomenon and a multidisciplinary approach. This analysis makes it possible to compile the list of the most productive and reputed authors in this line of research, led by three women, Emily Vraga (13 articles), Leticia Bode (8), and Michelle Amazeen (7), followed by Lucas Graves, Michael Hameleers, Edson C. Tandoc Jr. (6), H. Lee, Richard Ling, and Chris Wells (5). In terms of affiliation, 14 universities account for a quarter of the entire production analyzed, with North American institutions occupying a dominant position. Outstanding in this respect is the University of Wisconsin, where the greatest number of articles registered in WoS (22) are generated, followed by the universities of Boston (15), Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education, London (12), George Mason, Minnesota, Austin Texas (11), Georgetown, Harvard, Northwestern, Ohio State, Amsterdam, Oxford, and, in Singapore, Nanyang Technological University (10).
This domination of the research influences the language that predominates in the articles. Ninety-one percent of production is in English (487 articles), while Spanish comes a long way behind with 41 articles (7.6%). With insignificant percentages there are three articles in German, another three in Russian, one in Slovene, and another in Catalan.
In keeping with the geographical distribution of universities, the countries that show the greatest number of academic publications related to the issue (Table 1.2) are led by the United States (45.5% of the articles analyzed), followed by the United Kingdom (11.8%) and Spain (11%). Nonetheless, the proof that disinformation is a global and widespread concern lies in the fact that the investigations originate from some fifty countries, amongst which the European continent takes on an important role as 45.8% of those countries are located there.
Table 1.2 The 10 countries that produce thegreatest volume of articles related to disinformation
Country | Matches | % |
---|---|---|
USA | 249 | 46.5 |
United Kingdom | 63 | 11.8 |
Spain | 59 | 11.0 |
Australia | 27 | 5.0 |
Germany | 27 | 5.0 |
Netherlands | 21 | 3.9 |
Canada | 16 | 2.9 |
Singapore | 13 | 2.4 |
Denmark | 12 | 2.2 |
Switzerland | 12 | 2.2 |
The total number of journals from the Communication field that have published research related to disinformation is 64. Journals housing more than 5% of the total publications were considered to be the most committed to this issue; making calls for special issues has an influence on this. The most active are El Profesional de la Información and Social Media + Society, which surpass thirty registers each, New Media & Society and the International Journal of Communication (26), and Digital Journalism (24). Journalism Practice (23), Information, Communication & Society, and Political Communication (20) come close to these figures.
The exponential growth experienced in recent years by studies on disinformation has also had a positive influence on their impact. As a general figure, the average number of citations in other high impact publications obtained per article in Web of Science is 8.6. Table 1.3 shows the five most-cited articles, characterized by their addressing contexts and employing diverse methodologies, although politics is the central pivot in three of the investigations. The most referenced amongst them is “The Daily Show: Discursive integration and the reinvention of political journalism” (Baym 2005), a classic case study of the discipline that pioneered the use of “fake news.” Close behind is a recently published conceptual investigation, the work of Tandoc et al. (2018) titled “Defining fake news: A typology of scholarly definitions,” which in only two years has achieved 219 citations, thanks to the taxonomy proposed. The third article is an essay that analyzes Donald Trump’s Twitter feed and concludes that his success is due to simple, impulsive, and uncivil discourses (Ott 2017). The fourth place is occupied by Engesser et al. (2017), who develop a qualitative study on the rise of populism on Facebook and Twitter comparing four scenarios: Austria, Italy, Switzerland, and United Kingdom. Also on this list is an article that, by employing experimental techniques based on exposing users to misinformation content, evaluates the cognitive processes involved in processing verification and analyzes the incidence of corrections in the perception of news (Bode and Vraga 2015).
Table 1.3 Most-cited articles (total accumulated citations)
Article | Authors | Journal | Year | Total citations | Average citations per year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Daily Show: Discursive integration and the reinvention of political journalism | Baym, Geoffrey | Political Communication | 2005 | 229 | 14.3 |
Defining fake news: A typology of scholarly definition | Tandoc Jr., Edson C.; Lim, Zheng Wei; Ling, Richard | Digital Journalism | 2018 | 219 | 73 |
The age of Twitter: Donald J. Trump and the politics of
|