With more than 400 people packed into the UW HUB鈥檚 South Ballroom, Jevin West started off with a puzzle. The inaugural director showed side-by-side images of two women鈥檚 faces and asked the crowd which image was real.
Only about half got it right, illustrating one of the challenges ahead for the CIP. Modern technology has made it increasingly easy to manipulate information and increasingly difficult to discern the truth.
The Dec. 3 event, which featured the presidents of the University of Washington and Washington State University, celebrated the launch of the CIP with the announcement of a new statewide partnership to battle misinformation.
鈥淭his is all about our democracy,鈥 UW President said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing more important than that.
鈥淚f we care about common goals 鈥 things like safe communities, justice, equal opportunity 鈥 we have to care also about facts, truth and accuracy,鈥 Cauce said. 鈥淢isinformation can be weaponized. It has been weaponized to divide us and to weaken us.鈥
Cauce and WSU President (pictured at top) signed a document committing both institutions to working together on the misinformation issue. Schulz noted that WSU鈥檚 highly regarded and its presence in rural communities across the state make it valuable partner for the CIP and UW鈥檚 efforts.
鈥淲SU is uniquely suited particularly to assist in (addressing) the urban-rural divide, which we read so much about and really is pervasive,鈥 Schulz said.
The CIP, an interdisciplinary center housed in the Information School, will use applied research to engage with the public through community partners such as libraries to confront the misinformation epidemic. Along with West, an associate professor at the iSchool, its leadership team includes iSchool faculty members Chris Coward and Emma Spiro; from the ; and of the department. Those researchers all took part in the event program, as did of the ; and of WSU鈥檚 Murrow College.
The UW established the CIP after the Knight Foundation announced a $5 million investment in July. It鈥檚 part of a to better understand how technology is transforming democracy and how we receive and engage with information. The CIP also received substantial initial funding from the .
Gill spoke to the Knight Foundation鈥檚 investments in promoting the health of democracy amid new threats and rapidly evolving technology. He pointed to a key question for the foundation: 鈥淗ow can a democracy remain informed when, on the one hand, we have access to more information than at any time during human history, yet on the other, the authority behind facts is unclear and destabilized, and when the production and dissemination of information no longer rests solely in the hands of journalists and editors, but is distributed among the billions globally with internet connections?鈥
The event featured a panel of researchers, during which Caulfield joined Calo, Coward, Spiro, Starbird and moderator Anind Dey, dean of the Information School, to talk about some of the issues the CIP will address and how it will approach them.

鈥淲e are all vulnerable to misinformation and disinformation,鈥 Starbird said. She listed some of the research questions the CIP will explore: better understanding how and why misinformation and disinformation spread; measuring its impact; and what kinds of policy changes, technologies and education initiatives can help counteract it.
鈥淲hen I say education, I don鈥檛 mean K-12. I mean K-99,鈥 Starbird said. 鈥淚 think all of us need to be better educated about this so we can become healthier engagers in information spaces of all kinds.鈥
West concluded the event by revealing a T-shirt under his suit, split down the middle with UW and WSU colors and logos. It illustrated his hopes for a true statewide effort.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to make progress if we just do this in Seattle,鈥 West said. He noted that a series of town hall events are planned across the state in the coming months, starting with one . 鈥淭he town hall isn鈥檛 going to be about us speaking to the public. It鈥檚 about listening to them and using that as a way of engaging our research and engaging our education curriculum.鈥
Watch the event as it unfolded on our livestream: