The Role of the Crowd in Countering Misinformation: A Case Study of the COVID-19 Infodemic
Nicholas Micallef, Bing He, Srijan Kumar, Mustaque Ahamad, Nasir, Memon

TL;DR
This study analyzes how social media users organically counter COVID-19 misinformation on Twitter, highlighting the limited reach of professional fact checks and the significant role of citizen responses in refuting false claims.
Contribution
It provides a data-driven analysis of crowd responses to misinformation, contrasting them with professional fact checks, and offers insights into empowering citizens against misinformation.
Findings
Professional fact checks have limited visibility and reach.
Crowd responses to misinformation are rapid and diverse.
Some crowd refutations contain concrete evidence like reputable links.
Abstract
Fact checking by professionals is viewed as a vital defense in the fight against misinformation.While fact checking is important and its impact has been significant, fact checks could have limited visibility and may not reach the intended audience, such as those deeply embedded in polarized communities. Concerned citizens (i.e., the crowd), who are users of the platforms where misinformation appears, can play a crucial role in disseminating fact-checking information and in countering the spread of misinformation. To explore if this is the case, we conduct a data-driven study of misinformation on the Twitter platform, focusing on tweets related to the COVID-19 pandemic, analyzing the spread of misinformation, professional fact checks, and the crowd response to popular misleading claims about COVID-19. In this work, we curate a dataset of false claims and statements that seek to challenge…
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