The psychological and political correlates of conspiracy theory beliefs

被引:0
|
作者
Joseph Uscinski
Adam Enders
Amanda Diekman
John Funchion
Casey Klofstad
Sandra Kuebler
Manohar Murthi
Kamal Premaratne
Michelle Seelig
Daniel Verdear
Stefan Wuchty
机构
[1] University of Miami,Department of Political Science
[2] University of Louisville,Department of Political Science
[3] Indiana University,Department of Psychology
[4] University of Miami,Department of English
[5] Indiana University,Department of Linguistics
[6] University of Miami,Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
[7] University of Miami,Department of Cinema and Interactive Media
[8] University of Miami,Department of Computer Science
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Understanding the individual-level characteristics associated with conspiracy theory beliefs is vital to addressing and combatting those beliefs. While researchers have identified numerous psychological and political characteristics associated with conspiracy theory beliefs, the generalizability of those findings is uncertain because they are typically drawn from studies of only a few conspiracy theories. Here, we employ a national survey of 2021 U.S. adults that asks about 15 psychological and political characteristics as well as beliefs in 39 different conspiracy theories. Across 585 relationships examined within both bivariate (correlations) and multivariate (regression) frameworks, we find that psychological traits (e.g., dark triad) and non-partisan/ideological political worldviews (e.g., populism, support for violence) are most strongly related to individual conspiracy theory beliefs, regardless of the belief under consideration, while other previously identified correlates (e.g., partisanship, ideological extremity) are inconsistently related. We also find that the correlates of specific conspiracy theory beliefs mirror those of conspiracy thinking (the predisposition), indicating that this predisposition operates like an ‘average’ of individual conspiracy theory beliefs. Overall, our findings detail the psychological and political traits of the individuals most drawn to conspiracy theories and have important implications for scholars and practitioners seeking to prevent or reduce the impact of conspiracy theories.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The psychological and political correlates of conspiracy theory beliefs
    Uscinski, Joseph
    Enders, Adam
    Diekman, Amanda
    Funchion, John
    Klofstad, Casey
    Kuebler, Sandra
    Murthi, Manohar
    Premaratne, Kamal
    Seelig, Michelle
    Verdear, Daniel
    Wuchty, Stefan
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [2] Psychological, Political, and Situational Factors Combine to Boost COVID-19 Conspiracy Theory Beliefs
    Miller, Joanne M.
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SCIENCE POLITIQUE, 2020, 53 (02): : 327 - 334
  • [3] Conspiracy Theory Beliefs and Political Trust: The Moderating Role of Political Communication
    Schlipphak, Bernd
    Isani, Mujtaba
    Back, Mitja D.
    [J]. POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE, 2022, 10 (04): : 157 - 167
  • [4] Psychological context of conspiracy beliefs
    Halama, Peter
    [J]. CESKOSLOVENSKA PSYCHOLOGIE, 2019, 63 (03): : 312 - 324
  • [5] Values Correlates of Beliefs in Conspiracy Theories
    Rezende, Alessandro Teixeira
    Gouveia, Valdiney Veloso
    do Nascimento, Anderson Mesquita
    Vilar, Roosevelt
    Oliveira, Karen Guedes
    [J]. AVANCES EN PSICOLOGIA LATINOAMERICANA, 2019, 37 (02): : 219 - 234
  • [6] Reducing Conspiracy Theory Beliefs
    Stojanov, Ana
    [J]. PSIHOLOGIJA, 2015, 48 (03) : 251 - 266
  • [7] Psychological correlates of COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs and preventive measures: Evidence from Turkey
    Sinan Alper
    Fatih Bayrak
    Onurcan Yilmaz
    [J]. Current Psychology, 2021, 40 : 5708 - 5717
  • [8] Psychological correlates of COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs and preventive measures: Evidence from Turkey
    Alper, Sinan
    Bayrak, Fatih
    Yilmaz, Onurcan
    [J]. CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 40 (11) : 5708 - 5717
  • [9] Leveraging artificial intelligence to identify the psychological factors associated with conspiracy theory beliefs online
    Jonas R. Kunst
    Aleksander B. Gundersen
    Izabela Krysińska
    Jan Piasecki
    Tomi Wójtowicz
    Rafal Rygula
    Sander van der Linden
    Mikolaj Morzy
    [J]. Nature Communications, 15 (1)
  • [10] What is so special about conspiracy theories? Conceptually distinguishing beliefs in conspiracy theories from conspiracy beliefs in psychological research
    Nera, Kenzo
    Schopfer, Celine
    [J]. THEORY & PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 33 (03) : 287 - 305