Department of Psychology, Zukunftskolleg, University of Konstanz Konstanz, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2013 Apr 30;4:225. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00225. eCollection 2013.
Conspiracy theories are ubiquitous when it comes to explaining political events and societal phenomena. Individuals differ not only in the degree to which they believe in specific conspiracy theories, but also in their general susceptibility to explanations based on such theories, that is, their conspiracy mentality. We present the Conspiracy Mentality Questionnaire (CMQ), an instrument designed to efficiently assess differences in the generic tendency to engage in conspiracist ideation within and across cultures. The CMQ is available in English, German, and Turkish. In four studies, we examined the CMQ's factorial structure, reliability, measurement equivalence across cultures, and its convergent, discriminant, and predictive validity. Analyses based on a cross-cultural sample (Study 1a; N = 7,766) supported the conceptualization of conspiracy mentality as a one-dimensional construct across the three language versions of the CMQ that is stable across time (Study 1b; N = 141). Multi-group confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated cross-cultural measurement equivalence of the CMQ items. The instrument could therefore be used to examine differences in conspiracy mentality between European, North American, and Middle Eastern cultures. In Studies 2-4 (total N = 476), we report (re-)analyses of three datasets demonstrating the validity of the CMQ in student and working population samples in the UK and Germany. First, attesting to its convergent validity, the CMQ was highly correlated with another measure of generic conspiracy belief. Second, the CMQ showed patterns of meaningful associations with personality measures (e.g., Big Five dimensions, schizotypy), other generalized political attitudes (e.g., social dominance orientation and right-wing authoritarianism), and further individual differences (e.g., paranormal belief, lack of socio-political control). Finally, the CMQ predicted beliefs in specific conspiracy theories over and above other individual difference measures.
当涉及到解释政治事件和社会现象时,阴谋论无处不在。个体之间不仅在相信特定阴谋论的程度上有所不同,而且在他们对基于这些理论的解释的普遍易感性上也有所不同,也就是说,他们的阴谋心态。我们提出了阴谋心态问卷(CMQ),这是一种旨在有效评估个体在文化内和跨文化之间参与阴谋思维的一般倾向差异的工具。CMQ 有英语、德语和土耳其语三种版本。在四项研究中,我们检验了 CMQ 的因子结构、信度、跨文化测量等效性,以及它的聚合、区分和预测效度。基于跨文化样本的分析(研究 1a;N=7766)支持了阴谋心态概念作为 CMQ 三种语言版本的一维结构,并且在时间上是稳定的(研究 1b;N=141)。多组验证性因素分析表明,CMQ 项目具有跨文化测量等效性。因此,该工具可用于研究欧洲、北美和中东文化之间的阴谋心态差异。在研究 2-4(总 N=476)中,我们报告了在英国和德国的学生和工作人群样本中对三个数据集的(重新)分析结果,证明了 CMQ 的有效性。首先,CMQ 与另一种通用阴谋信仰的测量高度相关,证明了它的聚合效度。其次,CMQ 与人格测量(如大五维度、精神分裂症特质)、其他一般性政治态度(如社会支配倾向和右翼威权主义)以及进一步的个体差异(如超自然信仰、缺乏社会政治控制)之间存在有意义的关联模式。最后,CMQ 预测了特定阴谋理论的信仰,超过了其他个体差异测量。