Galliford Natasha, Furnham Adrian
Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, UK.
Norwegian Business School (BI), Nydalveien, Olso, Norway.
Scand J Psychol. 2017 Oct;58(5):422-428. doi: 10.1111/sjop.12382. Epub 2017 Aug 7.
This study examined the relationship between a series of individual difference measures and belief in political and medical conspiracy theories. Participants (N = 323) rated 20 conspiracy theories (10 medical, 10 political) and completed a set of questionnaires. Belief in political conspiracies was strongly positively correlated with belief in medical conspiracies. Belief in both conspiracy types was correlated with low self-esteem, low Conscientiousness, more right-wing political views, younger age, and greater belief in the benefits of Alternative Medicine. It was also correlated with religiousness and gender. Low Emotional Stability and Agreeableness were also correlated with belief in political conspiracies, and higher education level was correlated with belief in medical conspiracies. The findings generally demonstrated support for a monological belief system. Implications and limitations are discussed.
本研究考察了一系列个体差异测量指标与对政治和医学阴谋论的信念之间的关系。参与者(N = 323)对20种阴谋论(10种医学的,10种政治的)进行了评分,并完成了一组问卷。对政治阴谋的信念与对医学阴谋的信念呈强烈正相关。对这两种阴谋论的信念都与低自尊、低尽责性、更右翼的政治观点、较年轻的年龄以及对替代医学益处的更强信念相关。它还与宗教信仰和性别相关。低情绪稳定性和宜人性也与对政治阴谋的信念相关,而较高的教育水平与对医学阴谋的信念相关。研究结果总体上支持了一种单一逻辑的信念体系。对研究的意义和局限性进行了讨论。