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Towards Misinformation Resilience in Pakistan: A Participatory Study with Low-Socioeconomic Status Adults

Published: November 8, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2511.06147v1

By: Muhammad Abdullah Sohail , Amna Hassan , Shaheer Hammad and more

Potential Business Impact:

Helps poor people spot fake news online.

Business Areas:
Crowdsourcing Collaboration

Digital misinformation disproportionately affects low-socioeconomic status (SES) populations. While interventions for the Global South exist, they often report limited success, particularly among marginalized communities. Through a three-phase participatory study with 41 low-SES Pakistani adults, we conducted formative interviews to understand their information practices, followed by co-design sessions that translated these user-identified needs into concrete design requirements. Our findings reveal a sophisticated moral economy of sharing and a layered ecology of trust that prioritizes communal welfare. These insights inform the Scaffolded Support Model, a user-derived framework integrating on-demand assistance with gradual, inoculation-based skill acquisition. We instantiated this model in our prototype, "Pehchaan," and conducted usability testing (N=15), which confirmed its strong acceptance and cultural resonance, validating our culturally grounded approach. Our work contributes a foundational empirical account of non-Western misinformation practices, a replicable participatory methodology for inclusive design, and actionable principles for building information resilience in resource-constrained contexts.

Country of Origin
🇵🇰 Pakistan

Page Count
10 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Human-Computer Interaction