Online-Offline Spillovers – Potential Real-World Implications of Online Manipulation2024-11-19T09:43:57+01:00

Online-Offline Spillovers – Potential Real-World Implications of Online Manipulation

This project analyzes the previously unexplored questions of whether people’s online behavior spills over to their behavior in the offline world and what mediates the respective effects.

Employing a two-stage experimental setup, we first use field experiments on social media for online manipulations of our study participants. Second, we study the potential spillovers to our participants’ offline behavior in a laboratory setting. Specifically, we investigate whether attention from others on social media leads to a polarization of people’s political opinions and erodes their commitment to truth. We hypothesize that the treatment group receiving a relatively high levels of attention on social media will show more polarized profiles of political opinions.

Research Output

The Polarizing Impact of Continuous Presence on Users’ Behavior

People Prefer Moral Discretion to Fair Algorithms: Algorithm Aversion Beyond Intransparency

Dictator game variants with probabilistic (and cost-saving) payoffs: A systematic test

Autonomous systems in ethical dilemmas

News & Updates

Principal Investigators

Jürgen Pfeffer
Jürgen PfefferTUM School of Social Sciences and Technology
Matthias Uhl
Matthias UhlFaculty of Computer Science at Technische Hochschule Ingolstadt

Researchers

Gari WalkowitzTUM School of Social Sciences and Technology
Wienke StrathernTUM School of Social Sciences and Technology
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