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  3. Counterspeech encouraging users to adopt the perspective of minority groups reduces hate speech and its amplification on social media.
 

Counterspeech encouraging users to adopt the perspective of minority groups reduces hate speech and its amplification on social media.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/89330
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41598-025-05041-w
PubMed ID
40593002
Description
Online intergroup hostility is a pervasive and troubling issue, yet experimental evidence on how to curb it remains scarce. This study examines counterspeech as a user-driven strategy to reduce hate speech. Drawing on theories that suggest adopting the perspective of minority groups can reduce prejudice, we randomized four counterspeech strategies across the senders of 2102 xenophobic Twitter messages. Compared to a passive control group, we find that the pooled effect of the three perspective-centered strategies-traditional perspective-taking, analogical perspective-taking, and perspective getting-increased the likelihood that the sender deleted their xenophobic message by +0.14 SD ([Formula: see text]), decreased the number of likes the xenophobic message received by others (- 0.133 SD, [Formula: see text]), but yielded a limited and not statistically significant estimate for the share of xenophobic messages the sender posted over the following four weeks (- 0.084 SD, [Formula: see text]). Differences between the three perspective-centered strategies were generally small and not statistically significant, though analogical perspective-taking-encouraging senders to compare their own experiences of being attacked online with their discriminatory behavior toward outgroups-appears to have slightly larger effects across multiple outcomes. Disapproval messages without a perspective shift produced smaller and non-significant estimates. These findings advance our theoretical understanding of how counterspeech works and provide actionable insights for how users can contribute to reducing intergroup hostility and its amplification online-especially at a time when many platforms are scaling back content moderation.
Date of Publication
2025-07-01
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology
Keyword(s)
Counterspeech
•
Field experiment
•
Hate speech
•
Social media
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Gennaro, Gloria
Derksen, Laurenz
Abdelrahman, Aya
Broggini, Emma
Green, Mariya Alexandra
Haerter, Victoria Andrea
Institute of Political Science
Heer, Elia
Heidler, Isabel
Kauer, Fiona
Kim, Han-Nuri
Landry, Benjamin
Levis, Alessio
Li, Jiazhen
Şimşir, Şevval
Srbinovska, Iva
Vital, Robin Anna
Donnay, Karsten
Gilardi, Fabrizio
Hangartner, Dominik
Additional Credits
Institute of Political Science
Series
Scientific Reports
Publisher
Nature Research
ISSN
2045-2322
Access(Rights)
open.access
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