IDJC Receives Neo4j Research Grant to Track 2024 Campaign Misinformation
The (IDJC) has been awarded a $250,000 research grant from and use of the company鈥檚 graph database technology as part of an initiative to identify misinformation trends in the U.S. presidential election and other top 2024 contests.
, senior associate dean and professor at the and a nationally recognized expert in political campaigns and misinformation, will lead a team of researchers across the University and work with the Washington-based IDJC to illuminate hidden trends and actors spreading and influencing inaccurate information targeting U.S. voters through social media.
鈥淢illions of Americans鈥 voting decisions are shaped by what they see on social media or hear from friends basing their own information on non-news sources,鈥 says Kramer Director of the IDJC and a professor of practice in the Newhouse School of Public Communications.
鈥淭hese areas are ripe for misinformation and disinformation campaigns from domestic and foreign actors,鈥 Talev says. 鈥淣eo4j鈥檚 technology can allow us to see commonalities and hidden connections in a way that can shed light on these practices and help the public make fact-based decisions.鈥

The Neo4j award represents the first competitive grant for IDJC, a joint University initiative of the and .
The research team鈥檚 efforts focus on dissecting misinformation themes, pinpointing origins of messages and tracing misinformation by collecting and algorithmically classifying ads run on Facebook and Instagram as well as social media posts on Facebook and X, formerly known as Twitter. The project will also gather input from journalists and the public about the 2024 presidential election, and races for U.S. Senate and key congressional districts.
鈥淥ne of the things we want to know is how the information environment and misinformation might be making people doubt the electoral process and whether it鈥檚 working properly,鈥 says , research director for IDJC and a political science professor in the Maxwell School.
鈥淢isinformation could not just affect whether voters turn out in the current election, but whether they turn out in future elections,鈥 Dunaway said.

Stromer-Galley鈥檚 previous work on the project cataloged social media ad campaigns during the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. The Neo4j award is intended to collect similar data and to enhance the visual display for user interactions.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think these kinds of opportunities would be possible without the institute to coalesce and bring together a set of scholars from across the university who all share a common passion and concern about the health and state of our democracy and journalism,鈥 Stromer-Galley says.
Story by Emma Hudson