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The Role of Perceived Minority-group Status in the Conspiracy Beliefs of Factual Majority Groups

Overview
Journal R Soc Open Sci
Specialty Science
Date 2023 Oct 20
PMID 37859838
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Abstract

Research suggests that minority-group members sometimes are more susceptible to misinformation. Two complementary studies examined the influence of perceived minority status on susceptibility to misinformation and conspiracy beliefs. In study 1 ( = 2140), the perception of belonging to a minority group, rather than factually belonging to it, was most consistently related with an increased susceptibility to COVID-19 misinformation across national samples from the USA, the UK, Germany and Poland. Specifically, perceiving that one belongs to a gender minority group particularly predicted susceptibility to misinformation when participants factually did not belong to it. In pre-registered study 2 ( = 1823), an experiment aiming to manipulate the minority perceptions of men failed to influence conspiracy beliefs in the predicted direction. However, pre-registered correlational analyses showed that men who view themselves as a gender minority were more prone to gender conspiracy beliefs and exhibited a heightened conspiracy mentality. This effect was correlationally mediated by increased feelings of system identity threat, collective narcissism, group relative deprivation and actively open-minded thinking. Especially, the perception of being a minority in terms of power and influence (as compared to numerically) was linked to these outcomes. We discuss limitations and practical implications for countering misinformation.

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PMID: 39209818 PMC: 11362279. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-51740-9.


The role of perceived minority-group status in the conspiracy beliefs of factual majority groups.

Gundersen A, van der Linden S, Piksa M, Morzy M, Piasecki J, Rygula R R Soc Open Sci. 2023; 10(10):221036.

PMID: 37859838 PMC: 10582598. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.221036.

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