1. Trusting Others: A Pareto Distribution of Source and Message Credibility Among News Reporters
- Author
-
Aviv Barnoy and Zvi Reich
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Ideal (set theory) ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,050801 communication & media studies ,050109 social psychology ,Interpersonal communication ,Language and Linguistics ,Test (assessment) ,symbols.namesake ,0508 media and communications ,Credibility ,symbols ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Journalism ,Pareto distribution ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
This study uses the case study of journalists to explore the socio-cognitive nature of interpersonal trust in growingly deceptive ecosystems. Journalists are ideal test subjects to explore these issues as professional trust allocators, who receive immediate feedback on right and wrong trust decisions. The study differentiates, for the first time, between source and message credibility evaluations, based on a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods. Findings show that journalists can distinguish source and message credibility. However, in practice they rely on source evaluations as an “autopilot” default mode, shifting gears to observations of source and message credibility in epistemically complex cases. The proportion between both is close to Pareto distribution. This extreme division challenges both inductive and mixed inference theories of epistemic trust and suggests revisiting the “typification” doctrine of newswork. Data partially support the hegemony and “epistemic injustice” theory, showing that traditional credibility criteria might trigger the exclusion of nontraditional voices.
- Published
- 2020