阴谋论信仰与人际关系满意度

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Journal of Applied Social Psychology Pub Date : 2024-09-02 DOI:10.1111/jasp.13061
Daniel Toribio‐Flórez, Ricky Green, Karen M. Douglas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究人员对相信阴谋论如何对人际关系产生负面影响进行了理论分析。然而,尽管有越来越多的轶事证据表明阴谋论似乎会对人际关系产生影响,但却缺乏对这些影响的系统评估。在七项研究(其中六项是预先注册的,人数= 2526)中,我们考察了人们对他人阴谋论信仰的看法是否与他们与这些人的实际(或预期)关系满意度负相关。我们发现,参与者对其社交联系人的一般信仰(试验研究 1-2)和特定阴谋论(研究 1)的看法与他们与这些联系人的关系满意度呈负相关。通过假设情景,我们进一步观察到,当这些社交联系人中有人明确支持(相对于反对)阴谋论时,参与者预期他们的关系满意度会下降(研究 2、3a 和 3b)。最后,参与者预期与在网上约会简介中赞同(与反对)阴谋论的陌生人的关系满意度会降低(研究 4)。重要的是,在所有研究中,我们观察到参与者自身的阴谋论信念调节了他人的阴谋论信念与关系满意度之间的关联,揭示了一种相似-不相似模式:尽管在阴谋论信念较弱的参与者中,这种关联是负面的,但在阴谋论信念较强的参与者中,我们观察到了逆转的信号。我们的研究结果进一步表明,态度疏远的过程(以及其他关系变化)可以解释为什么感知到的阴谋信念会对关系满意度产生负面预测。综上所述,这项研究提供了阴谋信念有可能损害人际关系的证据。
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Belief in conspiracy theories and satisfaction in interpersonal relationships
Researchers have theorized about how belief in conspiracy theories can negatively affect interpersonal relationships. However, despite growing anecdotal evidence of the effects that conspiracy theories seem to have on people's relationships, a systematic assessment of these effects is lacking. In seven studies (six of them preregistered, N = 2526), we examined whether people's perceptions of others' conspiracy beliefs were negatively associated with their actual (or anticipated) relationship satisfaction with those others. We found that participants' perceptions of their social contacts' beliefs in general (Pilot Studies 1–2) and specific conspiracy theories (Study 1) were negatively associated with their relationship satisfaction with those contacts. Using a hypothetical scenario, we further observed that participants anticipated that their relationship satisfaction would worsen when one of these social contacts explicitly endorsed (vs. opposed) a conspiracy theory (Studies 2, 3a, and 3b). Finally, participants expected lower relationship satisfaction with a stranger who endorsed (vs. opposed) a conspiracy theory in their online dating profile (Study 4). Importantly, across all studies we observed that participants' own conspiracy beliefs moderated the association between others' conspiracy beliefs and relationship satisfaction, revealing a similarity–dissimilarity pattern: although the association was negative among participants with weaker conspiracy beliefs, we observed signals of reversal among participants with stronger conspiracy beliefs. Our findings further suggest that a process of attitudinal distancing (among other relational changes) could explain why perceived conspiracy beliefs negatively predicted relationship satisfaction. Taken together, this research provides evidence that conspiracy beliefs have the potential to harm interpersonal relationships.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
4.00%
发文量
95
期刊介绍: Published since 1971, Journal of Applied Social Psychology is a monthly publication devoted to applications of experimental behavioral science research to problems of society (e.g., organizational and leadership psychology, safety, health, and gender issues; perceptions of war and natural hazards; jury deliberation; performance, AIDS, cancer, heart disease, exercise, and sports).
期刊最新文献
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