阴谋论信念中的元推理命题自信与社会认知两极分化。

Q1 Social Sciences
Open Mind Pub Date : 2025-08-29 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1162/opmi.a.20
Carola Salvi, Marta K Mielicki, Alice Cancer, Paola Iannello, Tim George
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引用次数: 0

摘要

阴谋论在不同的时间和文化中弥漫着人类的思想,通常出现在COVID-19大流行等危机期间,它们影响了公众的行为和态度,特别是在疫苗犹豫方面。本研究探讨了阴谋信念的元认知基础,特别关注个人如何监控和评估他们解决问题的过程。我们认为阴谋信念与高度的命题自信有关——通常没有准确推理的支持。两项研究探讨了解决问题时元推理不准确性(即预期信心判断和委托错误)与阴谋信念之间的潜在关系。在两项研究中,我们检查了这种过度自信的元认知标记。研究1分析了George和Mielicki(2023)的档案数据,以调查COVID-19阴谋信念如何与可解和不可解复合远程关联(CRA)任务中可解性的初步判断相关联。研究2考察了Rebus谜题中的委托错误与阴谋信念之间的关系,同时也评估了社会认知极化(SCP)——一种包含意识形态僵化、不容忍歧义和仇外心理的结构。结果表明,SCP放大了委员会错误对阴谋信念的影响,将这些认知模式置于社会政治背景中。这些发现提供了新的证据,证明阴谋论信仰不仅仅是人们思考的产物,而且是他们思考的方式——强调了有缺陷的元推理和社会政治态度在维持阴谋论世界观方面的相互交织的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Exploring Meta-Reasoning Propositional Confidence in Conspiratorial Beliefs and Socio-Cognitive Polarization.

Exploring Meta-Reasoning Propositional Confidence in Conspiratorial Beliefs and Socio-Cognitive Polarization.

Exploring Meta-Reasoning Propositional Confidence in Conspiratorial Beliefs and Socio-Cognitive Polarization.

Exploring Meta-Reasoning Propositional Confidence in Conspiratorial Beliefs and Socio-Cognitive Polarization.

Conspiracy theories have pervaded human thought across time and cultures, often emerging during crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, where they influenced public behaviors and attitudes, notably in vaccine hesitancy. This research explores the metacognitive foundations of conspiracy beliefs, particularly focusing on how individuals monitor and assess their problem-solving processes. We propose that conspiracy beliefs are linked to high propositional confidence-often unsupported by accurate reasoning. Two studies were conducted to investigate the potential relationship between meta-reasoning inaccuracies (i.e., prospective confidence judgments and commission errors) during problem solving and conspiracy beliefs. Across two studies, we examine metacognitive markers of this overconfidence. Study 1 analyzes archival data from George and Mielicki's (2023) to investigate how COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs are associated with initial judgments of solvability in solvable and unsolvable Compound Remote Associate (CRA) tasks. Study 2 examines the relationship between commission errors on Rebus puzzles and conspiracy beliefs, while also assessing Socio-Cognitive Polarization (SCP)-a construct encompassing ideological rigidity, intolerance of ambiguity, and xenophobia. Results show that SCP amplified the effects of commission errors on conspiracy beliefs, situating these cognitive patterns within socio-political contexts. These findings offer novel evidence that conspiracy beliefs are not merely a product of what people think, but how they think-underscoring the intertwined roles of flawed meta-reasoning and socio-political attitudes in sustaining conspiratorial worldviews.

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来源期刊
Open Mind
Open Mind Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
53 weeks
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