Douglas Karen M, Sutton Robbie M
Department of Psychology, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, UK.
J Soc Psychol. 2008 Apr;148(2):210-21. doi: 10.3200/SOCP.148.2.210-222.
The authors examined the perceived and actual impact of exposure to conspiracy theories surrounding the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997. One group of undergraduate students rated their agreement and their classmates' perceived agreement with several statements about Diana's death. A second group of students from the same undergraduate population read material containing popular conspiracy theories about Diana's death before rating their own and others' agreement with the same statements and perceived retrospective attitudes (i.e., what they thought their own and others' attitudes were before reading the material). Results revealed that whereas participants in the second group accurately estimated others' attitude changes, they underestimated the extent to which their own attitudes were influenced.
作者们研究了接触1997年威尔士王妃戴安娜之死相关阴谋论的感知影响和实际影响。一组本科生对他们对关于戴安娜之死的若干陈述的认同程度以及他们同学的感知认同程度进行了评分。来自同一本科群体的另一组学生在阅读包含戴安娜之死流行阴谋论的材料之前,先对他们自己和他人对相同陈述的认同程度以及感知的回顾性态度(即他们认为自己和他人在阅读材料之前的态度)进行评分。结果显示,虽然第二组参与者准确估计了他人态度的变化,但他们低估了自己态度受到影响的程度。