Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

UT faculty win grant to study Russian disinformation campaigns

04.29.19 | University of Tennessee at Knoxville

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB transfers large imagery and model outputs quickly between field laptops, lab workstations, and secure archives.

An interdisciplinary research team from communications, anthropology, and political science will study Russian disinformation campaigns in three former Soviet republics as part of a $1.6 million Minerva research grant awarded through the United States Department of Defense.

UT researchers were one of only 12 academic groups nationwide selected for the prestigious Minerva Research Initiative awards this year.

The research team for the project consists of faculty members from five departments: Maureen Taylor (advertising and public relations), Catherine Luther (journalism and electronic media), Suzie Allard (information sciences), Michael Fitzgerald and Brandon Prins (political science), and Alex Bentley (anthropology). Also closely involved in the project are Natalie Rice, research associate for the College of Communication and Information's Center for Information and Communication Studies, and Oleg Manaev, global security fellow at the UT Institute of Nuclear Security.

"The study will monitor and analyze the content of Russian information warfare and measure the effectiveness the tactics have in shaping opinion in Eastern European nations Georgia, Ukraine, and Belarus," said Taylor, director of the School of Advertising and Public relations and principal investigator for the study.

The research will include a close inspection of both traditional media and popular social media platforms, including Russian-language local news media in the Baltics, Facebook, Twitter, and Vkontake, a Russian online social media and social networking service. Onsite public opinion polling and focus group testing will be conducted in cooperation with the Independent Institute for Socio-Economic and Political Studies (IISEPS), a Lithuania-based research center with more than 25 years of experience in research in the former Soviet Union countries, and Baltic Surveys.

Each team member brings specific expertise to the project and all will contribute to analysis of data collected:

"The project is significant because it not only measures Russian propaganda, but also assesses how this propaganda shapes public opinion," said Prins, professor of political science. "We want to model the relationships between propaganda and opinion and evaluate how disinformation campaigns upset democratic institutions."

The three countries selected for the project are increasingly the targets of propaganda campaigns.

"There is evidence that the selected countries are serving as testing grounds for Russian media tactics designed to influence public opinion and collective behavior with the goal of employing them against Russia's political rivals such as the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany," said Luther, director of the School of Journalism and Electronic Media.

The vision for the research project grew out of Rice's doctoral dissertation. Rice studies Russian propaganda, and the project extends this work by adding social media tracking and creating a mechanism to measure the effects of both traditional and social media.

The project began in April 2019 and will last through March 2024. After the project concludes, researchers plan to study foreign disinformation campaigns in Asia and Oceania.

The Minerva Research Initiative was started in 2008 by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and is a Department of Defense-sponsored, university-based social science research program. The goal of Minerva is to "improve the department's understanding of the social, cultural, behavioral, and political forces that shape the regions of the world." The results of the research are unclassified and intended to be of widespread importance.

###

CONTACT:

Brian Canever (865-974-0937, bcanever@utk.edu )

Keywords

Contact Information

Brian Canever
University of Tennessee at Knoxville
bcanever@tennessee.edu

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Tennessee at Knoxville. (2019, April 29). UT faculty win grant to study Russian disinformation campaigns. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8XGPWKP1/ut-faculty-win-grant-to-study-russian-disinformation-campaigns.html
MLA:
"UT faculty win grant to study Russian disinformation campaigns." Brightsurf News, Apr. 29 2019, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8XGPWKP1/ut-faculty-win-grant-to-study-russian-disinformation-campaigns.html.