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      True or false? Cognitive load when reading COVID-19 news headlines: an eye-tracking study

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          Abstract

          Misinformation is an important topic in the Information Retrieval (IR) context and has implications for both system-centered and user-centered IR. While it has been established that the performance in discerning misinformation is affected by a person's cognitive load, the variation in cognitive load in judging the veracity of news is less understood. To understand the variation in cognitive load imposed by reading news headlines related to COVID-19 claims, within the context of a fact-checking system, we conducted a within-subject, lab-based, quasi-experiment (N=40) with eye-tracking. Our results suggest that examining true claims imposed a higher cognitive load on participants when news headlines provided incorrect evidence for a claim and were inconsistent with the person's prior beliefs. In contrast, checking false claims imposed a higher cognitive load when the news headlines provided correct evidence for a claim and were consistent with the participants' prior beliefs. However, changing beliefs after examining a claim did not have a significant relationship with cognitive load while reading the news headlines. The results illustrate that reading news headlines related to true and false claims in the fact-checking context impose different levels of cognitive load. Our findings suggest that user engagement with tools for discerning misinformation needs to account for the possible variation in the mental effort involved in different information contexts.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          16 February 2023
          Article
          10.1145/3576840.3578290
          2302.08597
          450b5037-809b-4d5f-a9f5-d2fb775efe0e

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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          In ACM SIGIR Conference on Human Information Interaction and Retrieval (CHIIR 23), March 19-23, 2023, Austin, TX, USA. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 10 pages
          cs.HC

          Human-computer-interaction
          Human-computer-interaction

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