伪科学
感觉
焦虑
大流行
心理学
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
社会心理学
感知
控制(管理)
发展心理学
医学
精神科
替代医学
疾病
管理
病理
神经科学
传染病(医学专业)
经济
作者
Jakub Šrol,Eva Ballová Mikušková,Vladimíra Čavojová
标识
DOI:10.31234/osf.io/f9e6p
摘要
Societal crises and stressful events are associated with an upsurge of conspiracy beliefs that may help people to tackle feelings of lack of control. In our study (N = 783), we examined whether people with higher feelings of anxiety and lack of control early in the COVID-19 pandemic endorse more conspiracy theories. Our results show that a higher perception of risk of COVID-19 and lower trust in institutions’ response to the pandemic were related to feelings of anxiety and lack of control. Feeling the lack of control, but not anxiety, independently predicted COVID-19 conspiracy theory endorsement. Importantly, COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs were strongly correlated with generic conspiracy and pseudoscientific beliefs, which were likewise associated with the feeling of lack of control and lower trust in institutions. The results highlight that considering people’s emotional responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is crucial for our understanding of the spread of conspiracy and pseudoscientific beliefs.
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