Who’s Who of Information?
A Design Fiction Role-Play on AI, Media Production and Information Quality
Thibault Philippette (UCLouvain)
Concept
This activity invites participants to explore how trust in information is built, challenged, and negotiated in an AI-mediated media environment.
Through a role-playing simulation, participants adopt different producer or consumer roles and engage in a collective investigation of online messages. The experience highlights how intentions, biases, and values shape media discourse and how AI tools can amplify or obscure them.
The subsequent debriefing phase is central: it encourages participants to reflect on their perceptions of credibility, the non-neutrality of information, and the importance of identifying the intentions behind media messages.
Ultimately, the activity fosters critical awareness and informed trust in digital communication ecosystems integrating AI tools.
Priority
Priority 1: Reflecting on AI’s Positive and Negative Roles (Media Production): Understanding how AI reshapes information creation, credibility, and control.
Priority 2: Addressing AI-Generated Biases and Ethical/Deontological Implications (Media Reception): Examining the biases and ethical limits of AI-mediated communication.
Priority 3: Developing Skills as a Critical AI Prompter (Production and Reception): Learning to question, guide, and interpret AI systems and outputs critically.
Priority 4: Evaluating Audience Perception and Awareness (Media Reception): Observing how participants perceive and emotionally react to AI-driven information.
Objectives
Target group
Educators, media literacy practitioners, researchers, and higher-education students (age 16+)
Adaptable for teacher training, academic workshops, or blended learning settings.
Modalities : steps and instructions
Step 1 – Introduction
Facilitators introduce the context: “Information Quality in the AI Era.” Participants are split into two groups:
Step 2 – Production Phase
Each producer posts short messages (≈5 lines) on a shared discussion space (forum, chat, or online board) following their persona’s strategy. Some use AI tools to generate or illustrate their posts.
Consumers read and react in real time.
Step 3 – Interaction Phase
Consumers evaluate credibility, bias, and source quality, comment on posts, and try to guess the identity behind each message. Collective interpretation emerges.
Step 4 – Revelation Phase
Producers reveal their identities and strategies. Each explains how and why they used (or misused) AI.
Step 5 – Debriefing and Reflection
Educators guide a discussion connecting the simulation to real-world media environments:
This phase is essential to transform the experience into a discussion on trust, bias, and responsibility in AI-mediated communication.
Material and ressources
📄 Instructions for Media Producers (persona cards)
📄 Instructions for Media Consumers
📄 Facilitator’s Guide (timing, structure, discussion) + example debriefing questions
All materials are freely reusable as Open Educational Resources (OER).


