University of Winchester, UK.
Br J Psychol. 2017 Aug;108(3):507-527. doi: 10.1111/bjop.12231. Epub 2016 Nov 7.
Research on the psychology of conspiracy theories has shown recent steps towards a standardization of measures. The present article seeks to continue that trend by presenting the Flexible Inventory of Conspiracy Suspicions (FICS), a questionnaire template that can be adapted to measure suspicions of a conspiracy around nearly any topic of public interest. Compared to conspiracy belief measures that ask about specific theories on a given topic, the FICS is worded in such a way as to provide relatively stable validity across time and cultural context. Using a hybrid approach incorporating classical test theory and Rasch scaling, three questionnaire studies on Mechanical Turk demonstrate the validity of the FICS in measuring conspiracy suspicions regarding 9/11, vaccine safety, and US elections, with good psychometric properties in most situations. However, the utility of the FICS is limited in the case of climate change due to the existence of two opposing conspiracy theories that share essentially no common assumptions ('climate change is a hoax' vs. 'there is a conspiracy to make people believe that climate change is a hoax'). The results indicate that the FICS is a reliable and valid measure of conspiracy suspicions within certain parameters, and suggest a three-level model that differentiates general conspiracist ideation, relatively vague conspiracy suspicions, and relatively specific conspiracy beliefs.
对阴谋理论心理学的研究表明,最近已经朝着规范测量方法的方向迈出了几步。本文旨在延续这一趋势,提出灵活的阴谋嫌疑量表(FICS),这是一个问卷模板,可以根据需要进行调整,以测量公众关注的几乎任何话题的阴谋嫌疑。与询问特定主题的具体理论的阴谋信仰测量方法相比,FICS 的措辞方式使得它在时间和文化背景上具有相对稳定的有效性。通过采用融合经典测试理论和 RASCH 评分的混合方法,在 Mechanical Turk 上进行的三项问卷调查研究表明,FICS 在测量有关 9/11、疫苗安全和美国选举的阴谋嫌疑方面具有有效性,在大多数情况下具有良好的心理测量特性。然而,由于存在两个基本没有共同假设的对立阴谋理论(“气候变化是一个骗局”与“存在一个阴谋让人们相信气候变化是一个骗局”),FICS 在气候变化方面的实用性有限。结果表明,FICS 是在某些参数范围内测量阴谋嫌疑的可靠和有效的工具,并提出了一个区分一般阴谋主义观念、相对模糊的阴谋嫌疑和相对具体的阴谋信仰的三级模型。