Understanding Innovations in Journalistic Practice: A Field Experiment Examining Motivations for Fact-Checking Articles uri icon

publication date

  • February 2016

start page

  • 102

end page

  • 138

issue

  • 1

volume

  • 66

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0021-9916

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1460-2466

abstract

  • Why has fact-checking spread so quickly within U.S. political journalism? In the first field experiment conducted among reporters, we varied journalist exposure to messages that highlight either audience demand for fact-checking or the prestige it enjoys within the profession. Our results indicate that messages promoting the high status and journalistic values of fact-checking increased the prevalence of fact-checking coverage, while messages about audience demand were somewhat less successful. These findings suggest that political fact-checking is driven primarily by professional motives within journalism, a finding that helps us understand the process by which the practice spreads within the press as well as the factors that influence the behavior of journalists.

subjects

  • Information Science

keywords

  • fact-checking; journalistic innovation; field experiment