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. 2024 Oct 15;3(10):pgae393. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae393

Fig. 6.

Panel A shows five debunking actions labeled “Original topic” and five debunking actions labeled “New topic”. In between the two sets of actions are two arrows, pointing from the Original topic to the New topic. One arrow is blue, to represent transfer of beliefs about the authority’s accuracy. The other arrow is gray, to represent transfer of beliefs about the authority’s bias. See the Figure description for the summary of the transfer model. Panel B illustrates the results of the acquired polarization analysis using seven scenarios, each represented by three line charts, one for beliefs about the perspective on the new topic, one for beliefs about the authority’s accuracy, and one for beliefs about the authority’s bias. There is also a scatter plot illustrating the results from all 243 simulations. The x-axis reflects acquired accuracy polarization, the y-axis reflects acquired bias polarization, and the color of the points represents perspective polarization for the new topic area. Most of the points are clustered in the bottom left corner and are light gray (low bias polarization, low accuracy polarization, low perspective polarization). But there are many points scattered across the plot that are dark red, indicating perspective polarization. See the main text for discussion of specific scenarios.

Acquired polarized beliefs about the authority in one domain can propagate to and polarize initially shared beliefs in new domains. A) Simulation procedures in the original and new topic area for each pair of subgroups. In the original domain, two subgroups start with differing beliefs about a perspective on a topic area (i.e. proponent and opponent), but shared beliefs about the authority’s accuracy motive and bias. After observing five debunking actions by an authority, the two subgroups update their perspective beliefs as well as their beliefs about the authority, referred to as acquired beliefs about the authority’s accuracy and bias. The same authority (i.e. the same person or organization) then chooses to enter and debunk claims about a related perspective in a new topic area, therefore the acquired beliefs about the authority transfer to the new domain. We assume the two subgroups initially have shared beliefs about the new topic, but they are quite uncertain in their perspective beliefs (mean = 0.5, std = 0.25). We simulate the evolution of beliefs and quantify the potential acquired polarization in perspective beliefs in the new topic area, as a result of their acquired polarized beliefs about the authority from the original domain. B) The scatter plot shows the results of 243 pairs of simulations corresponding to the 243 pairs of simulations with various prior belief settings in the original domain. Each data point represents one pair of simulations; therefore, there are 243 points shown in the plot (see Fig. S6 for labels). Belief polarization is defined as the absolute value of the difference between the two subgroups’ beliefs (i.e. mean of belief distributions). The x- and y-axis represent the acquired polarization in beliefs about authority’s accuracy and bias, respectively, before observing the authority’s decisions in the new topic domain; darker points indicate larger polarization in beliefs about the new topic after five debunking actions by the same authority. The side panels show the evolution of beliefs in seven example pairs of simulations.