The science of rumors
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
5.9. Formazione e informazione
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Peer review journal
Yes
Journal
Issue/vol(year)
3/55 (2012)
ISSN
2037-416X
Publisher
INGV
Pages (printed)
421-425
Date Issued
July 2012
Subjects
Abstract
This study takes a soft scientific cut to talks about rumors, hoaxes and urban legends. Social psychology, more elegantly, uses the latin word rumor (rumour in British English), which means sound, voice, or gossip.
In social, economical, political, cultural and scientific communication, rumors indicate news that is presumed true, that circulates without being confirmed or made evident. The scientific history of rumors is briefly described starting from the period of ancient Rome, throughout the Second World War and the Internet era, up to today. We will try to answer some questions that can be useful to scientists today. What are rumors? How are they born? How do they spread? By which laws are they regulated? How do we need to fight them? A final question regards the collocation of rumors into modern science. Science today is divided into ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ science (the latter of which generally lacks a basic mathematical structure); these terms, respectively, indicate the natural sciences, which investigate Nature, and the social/human sciences, which investigate man in all his facets. Maybe rumors can be thought of as a bridge suspended between two banks: those of ‘scientific truth’ and ‘human truth’.
In social, economical, political, cultural and scientific communication, rumors indicate news that is presumed true, that circulates without being confirmed or made evident. The scientific history of rumors is briefly described starting from the period of ancient Rome, throughout the Second World War and the Internet era, up to today. We will try to answer some questions that can be useful to scientists today. What are rumors? How are they born? How do they spread? By which laws are they regulated? How do we need to fight them? A final question regards the collocation of rumors into modern science. Science today is divided into ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ science (the latter of which generally lacks a basic mathematical structure); these terms, respectively, indicate the natural sciences, which investigate Nature, and the social/human sciences, which investigate man in all his facets. Maybe rumors can be thought of as a bridge suspended between two banks: those of ‘scientific truth’ and ‘human truth’.
References
Allport, G., and L. Postman (1947). The Psychology of Rumor, New York, Henry Holt.
Bordia, P., and N. Di Fonzo (2004). Problem solving in social interactions on the Internet: rumor as social cognition,
Soc. Psychol. Quart., 67 (1), 33-49.
Festinger, L. (1957). A theory of cognitive dissonance, Evanston, IL, Row, Peterson.Fleischmann, M., S. Pons and M. Hawkins (1989). Electrochemically
induced nuclear fusion of deuterium, J. Electroanal. Chem., vol. 261, p. 301, and errata in vol. 263
Hall, S.S. (2011) Scientists on trial: at fault?, Nature, 477, 264-269.
Jung, C.G. (1959). A Visionary Rumour, Journal of Analytical Psychology, 4 (1), 5-19; available online, doi:
10.1111/j.1465-5922.1959.00005.x.
Pezzella, A.M. (2007). The Philosophy of Education, Lateran University Press.
Prasad, J. (1935). The psychology of rumour: A study relating to the great indian earthquake of 1934, Brit. J. Psychol., 26, 1-15.
Verhoeven, P. (2010). Sound-bite science: on the brevity of science and scientific experts in western European television
news, Sci. Commun., 32, 330-355.
Bordia, P., and N. Di Fonzo (2004). Problem solving in social interactions on the Internet: rumor as social cognition,
Soc. Psychol. Quart., 67 (1), 33-49.
Festinger, L. (1957). A theory of cognitive dissonance, Evanston, IL, Row, Peterson.Fleischmann, M., S. Pons and M. Hawkins (1989). Electrochemically
induced nuclear fusion of deuterium, J. Electroanal. Chem., vol. 261, p. 301, and errata in vol. 263
Hall, S.S. (2011) Scientists on trial: at fault?, Nature, 477, 264-269.
Jung, C.G. (1959). A Visionary Rumour, Journal of Analytical Psychology, 4 (1), 5-19; available online, doi:
10.1111/j.1465-5922.1959.00005.x.
Pezzella, A.M. (2007). The Philosophy of Education, Lateran University Press.
Prasad, J. (1935). The psychology of rumour: A study relating to the great indian earthquake of 1934, Brit. J. Psychol., 26, 1-15.
Verhoeven, P. (2010). Sound-bite science: on the brevity of science and scientific experts in western European television
news, Sci. Commun., 32, 330-355.
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