2014
DOI: 10.1080/01463373.2013.822407
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Echoes of a Conspiracy: Birthers, Truthers, and the Cultivation of Extremism

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Cited by 49 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Finally, more research is needed to determine how it is possible to successfully intervene on conspiracy theories. Existing research has shown that presenting counterconspiracy information may sometimes be effective, even among high conspiracy believers (Warner & Neville‐Shepard, ). Jolley and Douglas () showed that presenting counterconspiracy information before conspiracy information—in other words “inoculating” people against conspiracy theories—can reduce belief.…”
Section: Definitionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, more research is needed to determine how it is possible to successfully intervene on conspiracy theories. Existing research has shown that presenting counterconspiracy information may sometimes be effective, even among high conspiracy believers (Warner & Neville‐Shepard, ). Jolley and Douglas () showed that presenting counterconspiracy information before conspiracy information—in other words “inoculating” people against conspiracy theories—can reduce belief.…”
Section: Definitionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given these issues, understanding the psychosocial ori gins of belief in conspiracy theories remains an important task for scholars. To this end, a small body of work has examined the form and content of conspiracy theories (e.g., Bost & Prunier, 2013;Raab, Auer, Ortlieb, & Carbon, 2013;van Prooijen & Jostmann, 2013), the context in which conspiracy theories flourish (e.g., Grzesiak Feldman, 2013;Warner & Neville Shepard, 2014), and the linguistic styles of conspiracy theorists (e.g., Wood & Douglas, 2013). Concurrently, a larger body of research has focused on individual difference correlates of belief in conspiracy theories, overturning an earlier approach that attempted to pathologise such beliefs (e.g., Groh, 1987;Robins & Post, 1997).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People seem to have a general tendency to interpret information that is in line with their own beliefs and to dismiss alternative possibilities that challenge these beliefs (Zaller, ). With respect to conspiracy formation, first insights show that the characteristics of the presented evidence for and against a conspiracy theory influenced participants' attribution of the likelihood of a conspiracy (Leman & Cinnirella, ; Raab, Auer, Ortlieb, & Carbon, ; Warner & Neville‐Shepard, ). In this manner, Uscinski et al () have revealed that information cues need to be met by an individual's predisposition towards a conspiracy in order to become effective.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%