Tokyo, May 10 -- UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN-CTR) received information related to the study (UMIN000061490) titled 'Effects of AI-generated misinformation about the effectiveness of dietary supplements against diabetes on health beliefs and behavioral intentions' on May 8.
Study Type:
Interventional
Study Design:
Basic Design - Parallel
Randomization - Randomized
Blinding - Single blind -participants are blinded
Control - Active
Primary Sponsor:
Institute - The University of Tokyo
Condition:
Condition - Exposure to dietary supplement misinformation related to diabetes
Classification by malignancy - Others
Genomic information - NO
Objective:
Narrative objectives1 - This study aims to examine whether exposure to AI-generated misinformation about the anti-diabetes effectiveness of dietary supplements affects beliefs about the anti-diabetes effectiveness of dietary supplements, purchase or intake intentions, information-sharing intentions, and intentions to consult health professionals among the Japanese general public.
Basic objectives2 - Others
Intervention:
Interventions/Control_1 - Participants in the intervention group view AI generated misinformation claiming that one of four dietary supplements, royal jelly, DHA and EPA, soy isoflavones, and calcium is effective for regulating blood glucose levels, improving insulin function related to blood glucose regulation, and preventing diabetes. The message is viewed once during the web-based survey. After viewing the message, participants answer questions on health beliefs and behavioral intentions. At the end of the survey, accurate information and cautionary statements are provided to prevent misunderstanding.
Interventions/Control_2 - Participants in the control group view AI generated accurate information stating that one of the same four dietary supplements,royal jelly, DHA and EPA, soy isoflavones, and calcium is not effective for regulating blood glucose levels, improving insulin function related to blood glucose regulation, and preventing diabetes. The message is viewed once during the web-based survey. After viewing the message, participants answer questions on health beliefs and behavioral intentions.
Eligibility:
Age-lower limit - 18
years-old
Gender - Male and Female
Key inclusion criteria - Individuals aged 18 to 64 years
Registered panel members of a Japanese survey company who are able to complete an online survey
Individuals who have experience using generative AI
Individuals who provide informed consent online
Key exclusion criteria - Individuals who are not aware of dietary supplements
Individuals who have no experience using generative AI
Health care professionals, including physicians, nurses, pharmacists, registered dietitians, and dietitians
Individuals working in the AI field, including AI researchers or developers
Individuals with a personal or household history of cancer
Individuals currently receiving dietary therapy under the guidance of health professionals
Individuals who fail the attention-check question
Target Size - 800
Recruitment Status:
Recruitment status - No longer recruiting
Date of protocol fixation - 2026 Year 03 Month 04 Day
Date of IRB - 2026 Year 03 Month 03 Day
Anticipated trial start date - 2026 Year 03 Month 10 Day
Last follow-up date - 2026 Year 04 Month 20 Day
To know more, visit https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr_e/ctr_view.cgi?recptno=R000070359
Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.