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The role of cognitive biases in conspiracy beliefs


The role of cognitive biases in conspiracy beliefs: A literature review

This paper summarizes the role of cognitive biases in conspiratorial thinking, offering some insights for future research and raising questions about the ...

The role of cognitive biases in conspiracy beliefs: A literature review

The aim of this work is to review such literature, systematizing these concepts in a unifying framework of conspiracy mentality as a set of biased cognitive ...

[PDF] The Role of Cognitive Biases In Conspiracy Beliefs

In recent years, several studies have found that conspiracy believers tend to be more susceptible to cognitive biases (e.g., conjunction fallacy, ...

Beliefs in conspiracy theories and the need for cognitive closure - PMC

Specifically, after reading evidence individuals with high levels of belief in conspiracy theories tended to rate a conspiracy explanation as more likely ...

The Psychology of Conspiracy Theories

A combination of cognitive biases, social influences, emotional maturity, and family dynamics can contribute to an individual's belief in ...

Conspiracy beliefs are associated with a reduction in frontal beta ...

The heightened sensitivity to identifying meaningful patterns in ambiguous stimuli observed in conspiracy believers may be linked to a cognitive bias known as ...

The role of cognitive biases in conspiracy beliefs: A literature review

AbstractIn recent years, several studies have found that conspiracy believers tend to be more susceptible to cognitive biases (e.g., conjunction fallacy, ...

People with beliefs in conspiracy theories have a cognitive bias ...

People with beliefs in conspiracy theories have a cognitive bias known as the jumping to conclusion (JTC) bias, the tendency to perform hasty decisions based ...

So You Know It All: Cognitive Biases and Conspiracy Theories

The backfire effect demonstrates that even when presented with contradictory evidence, we are more likely to stick with our biases and further resist other ...

Conspiracy Theories: Evolved Functions and Psychological ...

Evidence further suggests that theory-of-mind mechanisms predict conspiracy beliefs. Specifically, the ability to read people's emotions from their eyes ...

Psychology study uncovers new details about the cognitive ...

People who believe in conspiracy theories display a cognitive bias ... brain function, with potential implications for personalized mental ...

Thinking Preferences and Conspiracy Belief: Intuitive ... - Frontiers

Furthermore, a preference for a more intuitive general thinking style, as opposed to an analytical thinking style, could be an additional underlying cognitive ...

Is it pathological to believe conspiracy theories? - Lisa Bortolotti, 2023

There are numerous and conflicting definitions of what a cognitive bias is, but in several sophisticated accounts the presence of a bias does ...

Why Do Some People Believe in Conspiracy Theories?

“Confirmation bias” is the most pervasive cognitive bias and a powerful driver of belief in conspiracies. ... function and cannot be switched off ...

Conspiracy theories and cognitive biases in the COVID-19 pandemic

In an adjunct in-depth statistical analysis, the researchers also found that the link between conspiracy theories and cognitive biases was not ...

The Psychology of Conspiracy Theories: Understanding the ...

Humans tend to recognize patterns, even in random or ambiguous stimuli. This cognitive bias leads people to identify connections where none ...

Proportionality bias - Wikipedia

It is a type of cognitive bias and plays an important role in people's tendency to accept conspiracy theories. Academic psychologist Rob Brotherton ...

Conspiracy theories and cognitive biases in the Covid-19 pandemic

It emerged that the group of participants who agreed strongly with conspiracy theories contained several individuals who demonstrated even less ...

Thinking Style and Paranormal Belief: The Role of Cognitive Biases

Cognitive biases (Jumping to Conclusions, Intentionalising, Catastrophising, Emotional Reasoning, and dichotomous thinking) correlated ...

Awake together: Sociopsychological processes of engagement in ...

For some authors, personality factors, cognitive biases, motivated cognition, and political ideology are seen as mutually exclusive explanations of conspiracy ...