新冠肺炎疫情期间,不少人把社交媒体作为主要信息来源,获取最新的疫情资讯。但英国一项调查表明,这些人违反封锁规定、相信或散播“5G传播新冠”等阴谋论的可能性,相对于不依赖社交媒体获取信息的人高出近60%。
People who rely on social media for information about coronavirus are more likely to believe conspiracy theories and go outside with symptoms or breach lockdown rules, a new study revealed.
一项最新研究显示,把社交媒体作为新冠肺炎疫情主要信息来源的人更容易相信阴谋论、在已出现感染症状的情况下外出,或违反封锁规定。
Research published by the Psychological Medicine journal found that 60 percent of people who believe that Covid-19 was directly linked to the world's growing 5G network used YouTube as their primary source of news.
研究发现,认为新冠肺炎与全球不断增加的5G网络直接相关的人中,有60%将YouTube作为主要资讯来源。该研究报告发表在《心理医学》杂志上。

And those who preferred Facebook to get their information 54 percent believed the 5G conspiracy theory compared to 20 percent who did not and 26 percent who were not sure.
而喜欢在脸书上获取信息的人中,54%的人相信5G阴谋论,20%的人不相信,26%的人不确定。
The 5G link to coronavirus has been widely debunked by Governments and tech experts. Yet people have been damaging masts or even setting fire to them while phone and broadband engineers have been harrassed and threatened leading to public information campaigns in some countries.
多国政府和技术专家都反驳了5G与新冠病毒有关这一谣言。然而,在一些国家,人们一直在破坏甚至纵火焚烧5G基站,电话和宽带工程师受到骚扰和威胁也导致了公共信息宣传活动的举行。
debunk[diːˈbʌŋk]:vt.揭穿;拆穿…的假面具;暴露
The new study also found:
新的研究还发现:
58% of those who have gone outside with Covid-19 symptoms use YouTube as a main information source, compared with 16% of those who haven’t;
在有新冠肺炎症状但仍外出的人中,有58%将YouTube作为主要信息来源,而在其他人中,这一比例为16%;
56% of people who believe there's no hard evidence Covid-19 exists use Facebook as a key information source, almost three times higher than the proportion of non-believers who do (20%)
认为没有确凿证据证明新冠肺炎存在的人中,有56%将脸书作为主要信息来源,这一比例几乎是不相信这种观点的人的三倍(20%)。
28% of those who believe that death figures have been deliberately exaggerated by the authorities have broken lockdown rules. 18% of believers have gone to work or outside with coronavirus symptoms, almost four times more than the 5% of non-believers.
那些认为死亡数字被政府故意夸大的人中,有28%的人违反了封锁规定;持这种观点的人中有18%曾在出现新冠肺炎症状后去工作或外出,几乎是不相信这一观点的人的4倍(5%)。
More than one in 20 (8%) think the symptoms that most individuals blame on Covid-19 appear to be connected to 5G network radiation - a false conspiracy that is thought to have motivated a number of mobile mast attacks across the country during lockdown.
超过二十分之一(8%)的人认为,大多数人所认为的新冠肺炎症状似乎与5G网络辐射有关——这是一个错误的阴谋论,这也使得封锁期间在英国各地发生了多次破坏移动基站事件。
Of those who believe this theory, 60% said they get their information from YouTube, compared with 14% who think that it is false.
在相信这一阴谋论的人中,60%的人说他们从YouTube上获取信息,相比之下在不相信这一阴谋论的人中,只有14%的人从YouTube上获取信息。
Among those who believe there is no hard evidence that the virus exists, 56% use Facebook as their key information source, almost three times higher than the proportion of people who do not believe such a thing (20%).
在那些认为没有确凿证据表明病毒存在的人中,56%的人将脸书作为主要信息来源,几乎是不相信这一观点的人的三倍(20%)。
The findings, based on surveys of 2,254 UK residents aged between 16 and 75 carried out by King's College London and Ipsos Mori, also suggest a link between those who have broken lockdown rules and use social media for details about coronavirus as well.
上述调查结果来源于伦敦国王学院和伊普索斯莫里民意调查机构对年龄在16岁至75岁之间的2254名英国居民进行的调查,结果还表明,那些违反封锁规定的人往往也使用社交媒体了解新冠疫情消息。
Three in 10 people who wrongly believe that 5G is causing Covid-19 symptoms have gone outside despite suspecting they may have the virus, compared with just 4% among those who reject this belief.
错误地认为5G会导致新冠肺炎症状的人中,有30%的人曾在怀疑自己可能感染了病毒后外出,而在不相信这种观点的人中,这一比例仅为4%。
'Our findings suggest that social media use is linked both to false beliefs about Covid-19 and to failure to follow the clear-cut rules of the lockdown,' said Dr Daniel Allington, senior lecturer in social and cultural artificial intelligence at King's College London.
伦敦国王学院社会与文化人工智能高级讲师丹尼尔•阿林顿博士说:“我们的研究结果表明,社交媒体的使用既与人们对新冠肺炎的错误认识有关,也与不遵守明确的封锁规定有关。”
clear-cut [ˌklɪə ˈkʌt]:adj.清晰的
'This is not surprising, given that so much of the information on social media is misleading or downright wrong.
“这并不奇怪,因为社交媒体上的很多信息都是误导性的,或者是完全错误的。”
'Now that some of the lockdown rules are being relaxed, people will have to make more and more of their own decisions about what is safe or unsafe - which means that access to good-quality information about Covid-19 will be more important than ever.
“现在一些封锁规定正在放松,人们就得自己决定什么是安全的,什么是不安全的——这意味着获得关于新冠肺炎的高质量信息将比以往任何时候都更加重要。”
职场英语:网络口碑 word of mouse
职场英语:如何转接客户来电
职场英语:什么是“萝卜招聘”
职场英语:员工从“无限休闲时间”中受益颇多
职场英语:关于辞职跳槽的表达
外企必备口语:发电子邮件的相关句子和词汇
外企必备口语:用英语为别人打气
职场英语:怎样用英语在办公室里发牢骚?
职场英语口语:培养个优秀运动员很不容易
职场英语:图表词汇盘点
职场英语:办公室要注意的“隔间礼仪”
职场美语:burn the candle at both ends 胡乱消耗精力;劳累过度
职场英语:有关“解聘”的几种说法
职场英语:处世有方的“社交变色龙”
职场英语:工作中常用的地道口语
职场英语:职场女性遭遇“玻璃悬崖”
外企必备口语:教你用英语谈论工作
职场英语口语:表达对服务的不满
职场英语:“公司”词汇知多少
职场英语口语:精彩的小区业主派对
职场英语:办公室女秘书的口语对话
职场英语:衍生"合同换客"
职场英语:办公室常用赞美英语经典句子
职场英语:自由职业者都是“开领工人”
职场英语:你得了“返工忧郁症”吗
职场美语:beside the point 离题,不中肯
职场英语:简单几句礼貌结束通话
职场英语:老板口中不靠谱的“职业虚景”
职场美语:bury one's head in the sand 不敢正视现实,驼鸟政策
职场英语:“封闭”在英语中的各种说法
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |