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Cameron Martel
Cameron Martel
PhD Student, MIT Sloan School of Management
Verified email at mit.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Partisan differences in physical distancing are linked to health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic
A Gollwitzer, C Martel, WJ Brady, P Pärnamets, IG Freedman, ...
Nature human behaviour 4 (11), 1186-1197, 2020
6272020
Reliance on emotion promotes belief in fake news
C Martel, G Pennycook, DG Rand
Cognitive research: principles and implications 5, 1-20, 2020
4022020
Linking self-reported social distancing to real-world behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic
A Gollwitzer, K McLoughlin, C Martel, J Marshall, JM Höhs, JA Bargh
Social Psychological and Personality Science 13 (2), 656-668, 2022
122*2022
Shared partisanship dramatically increases social tie formation in a Twitter field experiment
M Mosleh, C Martel, D Eckles, DG Rand
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118 (7), e2022761118, 2021
1082021
Perverse downstream consequences of debunking: Being corrected by another user for posting false political news increases subsequent sharing of low quality, partisan, and toxic …
M Mosleh, C Martel, D Eckles, D Rand
proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems …, 2021
862021
Birds of a feather don’t fact-check each other: Partisanship and the evaluation of news in Twitter’s Birdwatch crowdsourced fact-checking program
J Allen, C Martel, DG Rand
Proceedings of the 2022 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems …, 2022
752022
You’re definitely wrong, maybe: Correction style has minimal effect on corrections of misinformation online
C Martel, M Mosleh, DG Rand
Media and Communication 9 (1), 120-133, 2021
352021
Crowds can effectively identify misinformation at scale
C Martel, J Allen, G Pennycook, DG Rand
Perspectives on Psychological Science, 17456916231190388, 2022
192022
Autism spectrum traits predict higher social psychological skill
A Gollwitzer, C Martel, JC McPartland, JA Bargh
Proceedings of the national academy of sciences 116 (39), 19245-19247, 2019
192019
Misinformation warning labels are widely effective: A review of warning effects and their moderating features
C Martel, DG Rand
Current Opinion in Psychology, 101710, 2023
72023
Aversion towards simple broken patterns predicts moral judgment
A Gollwitzer, C Martel, JA Bargh, SWC Chang
Personality and Individual Differences 160, 109810, 2020
72020
Examining accuracy-prompt efficacy in combination with using colored borders to differentiate news and social content online
V Bhardwaj, C Martel, DG Rand
Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review, 2023
4*2023
Fact-checker warning labels are effective even for those who distrust fact-checkers
C Martel, D Rand
PsyArXiv, 2023
3*2023
Promoting engagement with social fact-checks online
M Mosleh, C Martel, D Eckles, D Rand
OSF, 2022
32022
Deviancy aversion and social norms
A Gollwitzer, C Martel, A Heinecke, JA Bargh
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 50 (4), 516-532, 2024
22024
Uncommon errors: adaptive intuitions in high-quality media environments increase susceptibility to misinformation
R Orchinik, C Martel, DG Rand, R Bhui
PsyArXiv, 2023
22023
On the efficacy of accuracy prompts across partisan lines: an adversarial collaboration
C Martel, S Rathje, CJ Clark, G Pennycook, JJ Van Bavel, DG Rand, ...
Psychological science, 09567976241232905, 2023
12023
Blocking of counter-partisan accounts drives political assortment on Twitter
C Martel, M Mosleh, Q Yang, T Zaman, D Rand
PsyArXiv, 2023
12023
A New Framework for Understanding and Intervening on False News Sharing
A Gollwitzer, AN Tump, C Martel, M Sultan, R Kurvers, R Hertwig, ...
OSF, 2024
2024
Blatantly false news increases belief in news that is merely implausible.
DE Levari, C Martel, R Orchinik, R Bhui, P Seli, G Pennycook, DG Rand
OSF, 2024
2024
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