Roy H Perlis, Ata Uslu, Sergio A Barroilhet, Paul A Vohringer, Anudeepa K Ramachandiran, Mauricio Santillana, Matthew A Baum, James N Druckman, Katherine Ognyanova, David Lazer
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Conspiratorial thinking in a 50-state survey of American adults.
Conspiratorial thoughts as a cognitive aspect are understudied outside small clinical cohorts. We conducted a 50-state non-probability internet survey of respondents age 18 and older, who completed the American Conspiratorial Thinking Scale (ACTS) and the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Across the 6 survey waves, there were 123,781 unique individuals. After reweighting, a total of 78.6 % somewhat or strongly agreed with at least one conspiratorial idea; 19.0 % agreed with all four of them. More conspiratorial thoughts were reported among those age 25-54, males, individuals who finished high school but did not start or complete college, and those with greater levels of depressive symptoms. Endorsing more conspiratorial thoughts was associated with a significantly lower likelihood of being vaccinated against COVID-19. The extent of correlation with non-vaccination suggests the importance of considering such thinking in designing public health strategies.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Affective Disorders publishes papers concerned with affective disorders in the widest sense: depression, mania, mood spectrum, emotions and personality, anxiety and stress. It is interdisciplinary and aims to bring together different approaches for a diverse readership. Top quality papers will be accepted dealing with any aspect of affective disorders, including neuroimaging, cognitive neurosciences, genetics, molecular biology, experimental and clinical neurosciences, pharmacology, neuroimmunoendocrinology, intervention and treatment trials.