The role of self-evaluation in predicting attitudes toward supporters of COVID-19-related conspiracy theories: A direct and a conceptual replication of Cichocka et al. (2016)

IF 2.8 3区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1177/18344909211052587
B. Siem, B. Kretzmeyer,, Stefan Stürmer
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

We examined the role of people’s self-evaluation in predicting their attitudes toward supporters of COVID-19-related conspiracy theories by replicating and extending the findings of a study by Cichocka et al. (2016, Study 3) in two preregistered studies (total N = 1179). Study 1, a direct replication, confirmed that narcissism and self-esteem—two different sources of people’s self-evaluation—differentially predicted their beliefs in a series of well-known conspiracy theories (not related to COVID-19), and served as mutual suppressor variables. Specifically, narcissism was positively related and self-esteem was negatively related to conspiracy beliefs, especially when the respective other predictor was controlled for. Study 2 extended Cichocka’s and our Study 1’s findings by testing the differential role of self-esteem and narcissism in predicting a COVID-19-specific criterion. Specifically, we focused on people’s rejection of supporters of COVID-19 conspiracy theories, a criterion we deem particularly important in curtailing the spread of these theories. Results were generally in line with previous findings, but effects were substantially weaker. As suggested by exploratory analyses, this might be due to the fact that the overall rejection of supporters measure comprises not only items capturing rejection of supporters but also items capturing low beliefs in conspiracy theories. These two distinct components differentially related to self-esteem and narcissism: the differential role of self-esteem and narcissism could only be replicated for the “low belief” subcomponent (thus replicating findings from the original study and from Study 1) but not for the “rejection of supporters” subcomponent. The present work thus contributes to recent research suggesting that low belief in conspiracy theories and the rejection of their supporters might be qualitatively different responses with unique antecedents.
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自我评价在预测对COVID-19相关阴谋论支持者的态度中的作用:Cichocka等人(2016)的直接和概念复制
我们通过复制和扩展Cichocka等人(2016年,研究3)在两项预先注册的研究中的研究结果(总共N = 1179)。直接复制的研究1证实,自恋和自尊——人们自我评价的两个不同来源——在一系列众所周知的阴谋论(与新冠肺炎无关)中差异预测了他们的信仰,并作为相互抑制变量。具体而言,自恋与阴谋信念呈正相关,自尊与阴谋信念负相关,尤其是当控制了各自的其他预测因素时。研究2通过测试自尊和自恋在预测COVID-19特异性标准中的不同作用,扩展了Cichocka和我们的研究1的发现。具体而言,我们关注的是人们对新冠肺炎阴谋论支持者的拒绝,我们认为这一标准对遏制这些理论的传播尤为重要。结果与之前的研究结果基本一致,但效果明显较弱。正如探索性分析所表明的那样,这可能是因为对支持者的总体拒绝测量不仅包括捕捉拒绝支持者的项目,还包括捕捉阴谋论低信念的项目。这两个不同的组成部分与自尊和自恋有着不同的关系:自尊和自恋的不同作用只能在“低信念”子组成部分中复制(因此复制了原始研究和研究1的发现),而不能在“拒绝支持者”子组成部分中复制。因此,目前的工作有助于最近的研究表明,对阴谋论的低信念和对其支持者的拒绝可能是具有独特前因的质的不同反应。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology
Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
20 weeks
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