← Volver a resultados
Ficha bibliográfica · Consulta y acceso
Artículo

When news is “written by artificial intelligence”: a systematic review of provenance and disclosure cues in journalism and their effects on credibility and trust

Lorena Licenji et al · Frontiers Media S.A · 2026

Material complementario disponible
Lectura rápida. Revisá los datos básicos del recurso y luego accedé al contenido desde el botón principal. En esta ficha solo se muestra la información necesaria para identificar la obra, citarla y abrirla.

Acceso al recurso

Entrá al contenido desde la opción principal o elegí otra fuente disponible.

Acceso principal

Material complementario disponible

El enlace apunta a material asociado, anexos, tablas, datos o página complementaria. No se marca como libro/texto completo.
Abrir material

Resumen

Descripción general del contenido del recurso.

IntroductionArtificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly embedded in journalism, yet audience responses may depend on both AI provenance, meaning who or what is presented as having written the story, and transparency cues that disclose AI use. This systematic literature review synthesises empirical studies examining how AI provenance cues and AI disclosure cues in journalism affect perceived credibility and trust.MethodsFollowing PRISMA 2020 and PRISMA-S, Scopus and Web of Science Core Collection were searched on 2 February 2026 for English-language, peer-reviewed journal articles and conference papers. Searches yielded 492 records. After deduplication and pre-screen exclusions, 290 records were screened at title/abstract level, and 47 studies with retrievable full texts were included. A structured narrative synthesis was conducted, guided by the Synthesis Without Meta-analysis (SWiM) guideline, to map study designs, cue operationalisations, outcome targets (message, source, outlet), and moderators.ResultsAcross heterogeneous designs, AI provenance cues were not associated with a consistent “AI penalty”: most extractable results indicated no difference between AI-attributed and human-attributed news, and observed effects were typically conditional on topic, baseline trust, outlet/source cues, and whether human oversight was signalled. Evidence on disclosure cues was limited (10 studies) and was dominated by null or conditional findings. Scepticism appeared more likely when disclosures implied full automation without accompanying accountability or oversight information.DiscussionA Cue–Inference–Target (CIT) framework is proposed to explain when AI cues shift epistemic-quality versus normative-legitimacy judgments. Future research should use factorial designs that separate provenance from disclosure and standardise reporting of cue wording, placement, and validated outcome measures.

Cómo citar

Elegí el formato que necesitás y copiá la referencia al portapapeles.

APA 7

al, L. L. E. (2026). When news is “written by artificial intelligence”: a systematic review of provenance and disclosure cues in journalism and their effects on credibility and trust. https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2026.1815243

MLA

al, Lorena Licenji et. "When news is “written by artificial intelligence”: a systematic review of provenance and disclosure cues in journalism and their effects on credibility and trust." 2026. https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2026.1815243.

Chicago

al, Lorena Licenji et. 2026. "When news is “written by artificial intelligence”: a systematic review of provenance and disclosure cues in journalism and their effects on credibility and trust.". https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2026.1815243.

Harvard

al, L. L. E. 2026, When news is “written by artificial intelligence”: a systematic review of provenance and disclosure cues in journalism and their effects on credibility and trust, Frontiers Media S.A, available at: https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2026.1815243 [Accessed 28 Jun. 2026].

Compartir e imprimir

Guardá la ficha, copiá su enlace permanente o imprimila como PDF.

Exportar referencia

Si usás un gestor bibliográfico, podés exportar el registro en los formatos más comunes.

Detalles del recurso

Información bibliográfica útil para confirmar que se trata del material correcto.

Título
When news is “written by artificial intelligence”: a systematic review of provenance and disclosure cues in journalism and their effects on credibility and trust
Autor / colaboradores
Lorena Licenji et al
Editorial
Frontiers Media S.A
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
2624-8212
ISSN
2624-8212
Idioma
eng

Materias

Explorá otros recursos relacionados a partir de estas materias.

Copiado