This general term describes information that is incorrect, whether on purpose or accident
What is misinformation?
When attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors spread through a social network, they are said to be what?
What is socially contagious?
A Habermasian view of "publics" would expect the most retweeted accounts to have this property
What is a large number of followers?
The tendency to not disagree with (perceived) majority opinions is known as what?
What is the Spiral of Silence?
This term describes misinformation which is intentionally misleading and malicious in nature
What is disinformation?
This term describes the ability to get tangible and intangible resources from one's social network
What is social capital?
This communication theory brings together theories of counterpublics and networked publics
What is networked counterpublics?
This effect is named after a movie star who garnered unwanted attention precisely because she tried to get information removed from the public eye
What is the Streisand effect?
While technically forms of misinformation, satire and parody are not considered what?
What is disinformation?
(Why not?)
"Birds of a feather flock together" is the quintessential expression for this phenomenon
What is homophily?
This term describes the most central actors in a social network
What is "core"?
When attempts at correction reinforce a person's view, this is known as what?
What is the backfire effect?
This image is an example of what?
What is cultural jamming?
In a retweet network, the "nodes" are typically what?
This term describes actors at the outer edges of a social network
What is "periphery"?
These two types of social comparison may occur frequently on social media
What are upward comparison and downward comparison?
This form of disinformation involves making people feel like they are going crazy by continually denying their reality.
What is gaslighting?
Public health is more than the aggregate of individual health. Rather, it is best understood as this.
What is collective health?
(Network approaches are important because the whole is more than the sum of its parts)
What is the periphery?
This term describes the "move fast and break things" approach of many tech companies
What is an "engineering mindset"?