Deprived, Radical, Alternatively Informed

Marc Ziegele, Maike Resing, Katharina Frehmann, N. Jackob, Ilka Jakobs, Oliver Quiring, Christian Schemer, Tanjev Schultz, Christina Viehmann
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The Covid-19 pandemic was accompanied by a massive increase of the supply and demand for pandemic-related information. Similarly, conspiracy theories about the origins and functions of the Covid-19 virus flourished during the early stages of the pandemic. The present study draws on a nationally representative sample of the German population aged 18+ (N = 1,207) to investigate factors that are associated with people’s susceptibility to believe in such theories. We draw on research from sociology, political science, and communication to predict that factors related to relative deprivation, political radicalism, and the consumption of alternative news on websites, video platforms, Social Network Sites, and messenger services are associated with an increased belief in Covid-19 conspiracy theories. The data largely supports our assumptions. Additionally, we show that the strength of belief in Covid-19 conspiracy theories is associated with reduced vaccination intentions, which suggests detrimental real-world health consequences of such a belief.
被剥夺,激进,或者被告知
新冠肺炎大流行伴随着大流行相关信息的供需大幅增加。同样,关于Covid-19病毒起源和功能的阴谋论在大流行的早期阶段蓬勃发展。目前的研究采用了德国18岁以上人口的全国代表性样本(N = 1207)来调查与人们相信这些理论的易感性相关的因素。我们利用社会学、政治学和传播学的研究来预测,与相对剥夺、政治激进主义以及在网站、视频平台、社交网站和信使服务上消费另类新闻相关的因素与对Covid-19阴谋论的信任度增加有关。数据在很大程度上支持了我们的假设。此外,我们表明,对Covid-19阴谋论的信念强度与疫苗接种意图的减少有关,这表明这种信念对现实世界的健康有害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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