NexusFi: Find Your Edge


Home Menu

 





Misinformation Susceptibility Test


Discussion in Off-Topic

Updated
      Top Posters
    1. looks_one bwolf with 2 posts (1 thanks)
    2. looks_two COoneguy with 2 posts (0 thanks)
    3. looks_3 bobwest with 1 posts (4 thanks)
    4. looks_4 Tymbeline with 1 posts (1 thanks)
    1. trending_up 542 views
    2. thumb_up 6 thanks given
    3. group 1 followers
    1. forum 4 posts
    2. attach_file 1 attachments




Closed Thread
 
Search this Thread

Misinformation Susceptibility Test

  #1 (permalink)
 
Tymbeline's Avatar
 Tymbeline 
Leeds UK
Legendary Market Wizard
 
Experience: Intermediate
Platform: Tradovate
Broker: Tradovate
Trading: MES, MNQ
Frequency: Several times daily
Duration: Minutes
Posts: 649 since Apr 2015
Thanks Given: 2,349
Thanks Received: 1,057

University of Cambridge psychologists have developed the first validated “misinformation susceptibility test”.

The quick two-minute quiz gives a solid indication of how vulnerable a person is to being duped by the kind of fabricated news that is flooding online spaces.

The test, proven to work through a series of experiments involving over 8,000 participants taking place over two years, has been deployed by polling organisation YouGov to determine how susceptible Americans are to fake headlines.

The first survey to use the new 20-point test, called ‘MIST’ by researchers and developed using an early version of ChatGPT, has found that – on average – adult US citizens correctly classified two-thirds (65%) of headlines they were shown as either real or fake.

However, the polling found that younger adults are worse than older adults at identifying false headlines, and that the more time someone spent online recreationally, the less likely they were to be able to tell real news from misinformation.

This runs counter to prevailing public attitudes regarding online misinformation spread, say researchers – that older, less digitally-savvy “boomers” are more likely to be taken in by fake news.

You can take the test here.

Started this thread
Thanked by:

Can you help answer these questions
from other members on NexusFi?
Cheap historycal L1 data for stocks
Stocks and ETFs
Trade idea based off three indicators.
Traders Hideout
REcommedations for programming help
Sierra Chart
How to apply profiles
Traders Hideout
About a successful futures trader who didnt know anythin …
Psychology and Money Management
 
  #2 (permalink)
 
bwolf's Avatar
 bwolf 
Los Angeles, CA
 
Experience: None
Platform: NT8, TOS, Tradingview, BH
Broker: Ninjatrader
Trading: ES
Posts: 258 since Aug 2019
Thanks Given: 682
Thanks Received: 564

It's so positively, stereotypically, and predictably left-wing -- you just have to assume that going in and it's a cinch. It really says more about the test designers than the takers IMO.


You can't outsource confidence in trading decisions
Visit my NexusFi Trade Journal
Thanked by:
  #3 (permalink)
 COoneguy 
Denver Colorado USA
 
Experience: Intermediate
Platform: Motivewave/Optimus Flow
Broker: Optimus/ AMP/ Ironbeam
Trading: es nq
Frequency: Several times daily
Duration: Minutes
Posts: 37 since Feb 2020
Thanks Given: 19
Thanks Received: 39


@bwolf whatt is the predictable left wing part? I'm curious.

Sent using the NexusFi mobile app

  #4 (permalink)
 COoneguy 
Denver Colorado USA
 
Experience: Intermediate
Platform: Motivewave/Optimus Flow
Broker: Optimus/ AMP/ Ironbeam
Trading: es nq
Frequency: Several times daily
Duration: Minutes
Posts: 37 since Feb 2020
Thanks Given: 19
Thanks Received: 39

@bwolf dude, no intention of starting some sort of passing contest with you. I have genuine curiosity about what indications of bias you spotted. You don't want to answer, that's OK.

Sent using the NexusFi mobile app

  #5 (permalink)
 
bobwest's Avatar
 bobwest 
Western Florida
Site Moderator
 
Experience: Advanced
Platform: Sierra Chart
Trading: ES, YM
Frequency: Several times daily
Duration: Minutes
Posts: 8,172 since Jan 2013
Thanks Given: 57,516
Thanks Received: 26,292


Tymbeline View Post
University of Cambridge psychologists have developed the first validated “misinformation susceptibility test”.

The quick two-minute quiz gives a solid indication of how vulnerable a person is to being duped by the kind of fabricated news that is flooding online spaces.

Hi @Tymbeline,

I am sorry, but this topic, in today's highly polarized environment, qualifies as politically sensitive and so falls under the forum's rule against politics.

You may see that there are already comments being made on the politics of the questions on the quiz.

I do not think you were attempting to raise a political point or controversy, but I am afraid it is inevitable for politics to arise here. Our experience is that political issues are out of place in the forum, and that they only create disagreements that have no relation to trading and that are unnecessarily disruptive.

In light of this, this thread is now closed.

Bob.

When one door closes, another opens.
-- Cervantes, Don Quixote

Closed Thread



Last Updated on July 21, 2023


© 2024 NexusFi™, s.a., All Rights Reserved.
Av Ricardo J. Alfaro, Century Tower, Panama City, Panama, Ph: +507 833-9432 (Panama and Intl), +1 888-312-3001 (USA and Canada)
All information is for educational use only and is not investment advice. There is a substantial risk of loss in trading commodity futures, stocks, options and foreign exchange products. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
About Us - Contact Us - Site Rules, Acceptable Use, and Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy - Downloads - Top
no new posts