When political news articles contradict what readers expect from a particular media outlet, they tend to think more deeply about the information and become better at identifying false claims. Two recent experiments demonstrated that this mental discrepancy causes people to evaluate content more thoroughly and reject inaccurate statements they might otherwise have believed. These findings were published in Communication Research Reports.
Scholars have long sought to understand why political misinformation spreads so easily online. Much of the early research looked at how people react to correction after they had already accepted a false claim. Recently, communication researchers have begun to assess specific mental processes that occur at the very moment a person encounters questionable news.
Purdue University researchers Diane Jackson and Jennifer Howe, an associate professor at Purdue University, wanted to test the newly proposed framework. This conceptual framework illustrates how individuals perceive flawed information in real time. This suggests that individual characteristics and situational factors determine whether readers notice factual issues in a news article.
The main concept in this process is cognitive consistency. Consistency occurs when new information perfectly matches a person’s existing beliefs and expectations. When a reader sees a headline from their favorite news outlet and the article confirms their worldview, their brain experiences a pleasant sense of conformity.
Inconsistency occurs when expectations are unexpectedly violated. If a staunch conservative clicks on a conservative news site and finds an article promoting liberal talking points, the discrepancy creates psychological friction. This friction forces your brain to pause and assess the situation.
To understand how people resolve this friction, researchers focused on metacognitive efforts. This term refers to the process of thinking about one’s own thinking. This is a higher level of awareness that actively monitors how a person is interpreting incoming information.
When people experience mental alignment, they tend to coast on autopilot and apply little metacognitive effort. When you experience a discrepancy, you have to work harder to understand the conflicting details. Jackson and Howe designed a study to see if political loyalty amplifies this mental shift.
Politically connected people often seek out news sources that validate their opinions, a practice known as selective exposure. They usually want to avoid the psychological discomfort of reading opposing opinions. The researchers hypothesized that when highly partisan individuals unexpectedly encounter opposing views on a trusted site, the surprise may trigger a surge in metacognitive effort.
To test these ideas, the researchers conducted two separate experiments. They created mock news articles about two highly polarizing political issues in the United States. Half of the articles focused on mask mandates during the pandemic, and the other half focused on critical race theory in schools.
The research team first conducted a pilot study to confirm that these two topics evoked truly polarized political responses. They needed an issue that would provoke a strong emotional response from both sides of the political spectrum. The results of the pilot study confirmed their choice.
Each topic included a distinctly conservative version and a distinctly liberal version. For consistency, I kept all articles about the same length. Most importantly, each article contained intentional misinformation intended to test readers’ ability to detect accurately.
In the first experiment, the researchers recruited an initial group of undergraduate students. They divided participants into two categories based on self-reported political affiliation. One group consisted of individuals who supported a particular political party, and the second group included independent individuals who were independent or identified as independent.
During the experiment, participants selected news outlets from a provided list of explicitly liberal or conservative sources. The researchers clearly labeled each source’s political leanings, so participants knew exactly what they were selecting. This setup mimicked the way people naturally seek out news that matches their opinions in the real world.
After making their choices, participants were randomly assigned to read either the conservative or liberal version of the news article. The task was random, so some participants read an article that matched the political stance of their chosen news organization. Others have received articles that actively challenge the known biases of the same news organizations.
The researchers simply asked participants to read the content and answer questions about their experiences. They measured how much metacognitive effort readers expended by asking whether the story was surprising given the source and whether it matched the reader’s expectations. They also asked participants to rate the overall accuracy of the information and whether they agreed with the author.
To ensure that readers were aware of the underlying biases in the story, the researchers included basic comprehension checks. They asked participants to identify the ideological leanings of the news articles they had just read. Those who could not correctly identify the slope were excluded from the final analysis.
The results showed a clear pattern for politically engaged participants. These partisan readers expended little mental effort when the news story matched the expected perspective of the selected news outlet. They assumed the information was correct, failed to detect false claims, and expressed high levels of agreement with the text.
The opposite happened when the article fell short of expectations. When partisan readers encountered liberal articles on conservative sites, or vice versa, internal disagreements forced them to pause and think. They reported much higher levels of mental oversight during the reading process.
This increased mental effort had a direct impact on content perception. Because they paid close attention to their own thought processes, they were much less likely to think the article was accurate. They pointed to information problems and strongly opposed the core message.
To confirm that these results were reliable, Jackson and Howe conducted a second experiment with a broader group of general adults across the country. Rather than comparing partisans and independents, this time we compared people with very strong political loyalties to people with weaker political ties. The experimental design completely mirrored the first experiment.
The second experiment yielded nearly identical results across the new groups. Strong partisans experienced the most pronounced effects when faced with unexpected content. Matching stories gave them a false sense of security, while non-matching stories triggered their internal alarm and increased their ability to detect fabricated details.
These two experiments combined show that humans are capable of recognizing bad information, even when it appears on websites that we normally trust. The key factor is to break their expectations. Just reading an article that feels out of place forces your brain to abandon mental shortcuts.
Although this experiment provides clear evidence of how expectations shape reading habits, the researchers relied entirely on self-reported survey data. After reading the material, participants were required to accurately describe their thought process. Measuring mental effort through direct biological feedback or other observational methods may provide different insights in the future.
The study also focused entirely on a highly polarizing political topic. Issues like mask mandates and classroom curriculum evoke strong emotional responses that may not be reflected in daily news consumption. It remains unclear whether readers will exert the same mental energy to evaluate false claims about zoning laws or basic economic policy.
Future research will investigate how these mechanisms operate outside of a simulated laboratory environment. The researchers hope to observe whether regular consumers of a particular partisan network show similar patterns when viewing their actual news feeds. Additional testing could also utilize broader questionnaires to measure consent and deception.
Ultimately, the findings provide practical lessons for daily news consumption. Taking a moment to actively evaluate why a headline feels completely right or completely wrong may be your best defense against fabricated content. Slowing down the reading process will make your mind much sharper when evaluating questionable claims.
The study, “Partisanship and Its Effects on Metacognitive Effort, Agreement, and Misinformation Detection,” was authored by Diane Jackson and Jennifer Howe.

