First misinformation susceptibility test finds 'very online' Gen Z and millennials are most vulnerable to fake news
First misinformation susceptibility test finds 'very online' Gen Z and millennials are most vulnerable to fake news

First misinformation susceptibility test finds 'very online' Gen Z and millennials are most vulnerable to fake news

Researchers want the public to test themselves: https://yourmist.streamlit.app/. Selecting true or false against 20 headlines gives the user a set of scores and a "resilience" ranking that compares them to the wider U.S. population. It takes less than two minutes to complete.
The paper
Edit: the article might be misrepresenting the study and its findings, so it's worth checking the paper itself. (See @realChem 's comment in the thread).
Hey all, thanks for reporting this to bring some extra attention to it. I'm going to leave this article up, as it is not exactly misinformation or anything otherwise antithetical to being shared on this community, but I do want to note that there are four different sources here:
From what I can tell without knowing how they actually did their analysis the data here looks fine, but (this not being a scientific paper) some of the text surrounding the data is a bit misleading.EDIT: Actually it looks like they've shared their full dataset including how they broke categories down for analysis, it's available here. Seeing this doesn't much change my overall impression of the survey other than to agree with Panteleimon that the demographic representation here is not very well balanced, especially once you start trying to take the intersections of multiple categories. Doing that, some of their data points are going to have much lower statistical significance than other. My main concern is that some of the text surrounding the data is kinda misleading. For example, in one spot they write, "Older adults perform better than younger adults when it comes to the Misinformation Susceptibility Test," which (if their data and analysis can be believed) is true. However nearby they write, "Younger Americans are less skilled than older adults at identifying real from fake news," which is a different claim and as far as I can tell isn't well supported by their data. To see the difference, note that when identifying real vs fake news a reader has more to go on than just a headline. MIST doesn't test the ability to incorporate all of that context, that's just not what it was designed to do.Finally, I'd just like to say I'm pretty impressed by the level of skepticism, critical thinking, and analysis you all have already done in the comments. I think that this indicates a pretty healthy relationship to science communication. (If anything folks are maybe erring a bit on the side of too skeptical, but I blame the phys-org article for that, since it mixed all the sources together.)
Throwing phys.org into my "not necessarily reliable sources" list. Sorry about this, I'll be more careful in the future.
I added "Misleading" to the title.