Researchers say their findings present a “clear need for action” for more high-quality information to be shared on social media and “strengthened content moderation”.
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Researchers say their findings present a “clear need for action” for more high-quality information to be shared on social media and “strengthened content moderation”.
They included 27 studies concerning 5,057 social media posts.

The rate of misinformation ranged from 0 per cent for videos analysed on anxiety and depression from YouTube Kids to 56.9 per cent for claustrophobia videos on YouTube, the authors wrote in the Journal of Social Media Research.