
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Technology is making it easier and easier to create and disseminate visuals, from text-to-image artificial intelligence models and sophisticated deepfakes to simple memes retweeted with hashtags. Visuals are the lingua franca of the internet, but their potential to easily spread misinformation — particularly about health topics — make them especially dangerous to the public. That’s according to an article published last year in the journal Science Communication. Marketplace’s Meghan McCarty Carino spoke to Andy King, an associate professor of communication at the University of Utah. King co-authored the commentary titled “Missing the Bigger Picture,” which discussed what makes visual misinformation unique.
By Marketplace4.5
12471,247 ratings
Technology is making it easier and easier to create and disseminate visuals, from text-to-image artificial intelligence models and sophisticated deepfakes to simple memes retweeted with hashtags. Visuals are the lingua franca of the internet, but their potential to easily spread misinformation — particularly about health topics — make them especially dangerous to the public. That’s according to an article published last year in the journal Science Communication. Marketplace’s Meghan McCarty Carino spoke to Andy King, an associate professor of communication at the University of Utah. King co-authored the commentary titled “Missing the Bigger Picture,” which discussed what makes visual misinformation unique.

31,965 Listeners

30,668 Listeners

8,768 Listeners

925 Listeners

1,386 Listeners

1,704 Listeners

4,335 Listeners

2,177 Listeners

5,487 Listeners

56,481 Listeners

1,449 Listeners

9,523 Listeners

3,590 Listeners

6,445 Listeners

6,391 Listeners

163 Listeners

2,996 Listeners

5,506 Listeners

1,383 Listeners

90 Listeners