Dow Benjamin J, Johnson Amber L, Wang Cynthia S, Whitson Jennifer, Menon Tanya
Olin Business School University of Washington in St. Louis St. Louis Missouri USA.
Robert H. Smith School of Business University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA.
Soc Personal Psychol Compass. 2021 Sep;15(9):e12636. doi: 10.1111/spc3.12636. Epub 2021 Aug 4.
The study outlines a model for how the COVID-19 pandemic has uniquely exacerbated the propagation of conspiracy beliefs and subsequent harmful behaviors. The pandemic has led to widespread disruption of cognitive and social structures. As people face these disruptions they turn online seeking alternative cognitive and social structures. Once there, social media radicalizes beliefs, increasing contagion (rapid spread) and stickiness (resistance to change) of conspiracy theories. As conspiracy theories are reinforced in online communities, social norms develop, translating conspiracy beliefs into real-world action. These real-world exchanges are then posted back on social media, where they are further reinforced and amplified, and the cycle continues. In the broader population, this process draws attention to conspiracy theories and those who confidently espouse them. This attention can drive perceptions that conspiracy beliefs are less fringe and more popular, potentially normalizing such beliefs for the mainstream. We conclude by considering interventions and future research to address this seemingly intractable problem.
该研究概述了一个模型,用以说明新冠疫情如何独特地加剧了阴谋论的传播以及随后的有害行为。疫情导致了认知和社会结构的广泛混乱。当人们面对这些混乱时,他们转向网络寻找替代性的认知和社会结构。一旦进入网络,社交媒体会使信念极端化,增加阴谋论的传播(迅速扩散)和粘性(抗拒改变)。随着阴谋论在网络社区中得到强化,社会规范逐渐形成,将阴谋论信念转化为现实世界中的行动。这些现实世界中的交流随后又被发布回社交媒体,在那里它们会得到进一步强化和放大,循环往复。在更广泛的人群中,这一过程使人们关注到阴谋论以及那些自信地宣扬阴谋论的人。这种关注可能会促使人们认为阴谋论信念并非边缘观念,而是更受欢迎,这有可能使此类信念在主流群体中变得正常化。我们通过考虑应对这一看似棘手问题的干预措施和未来研究来得出结论。