In: Studia Psychologica, vol. 67, no. 2
Details:
Pages: 121 - 136
Language: eng
Keywords:
conspiracy belief; probabilistic reasoning; scientific reasoning; anti-scientific attitudes; mindware
Original source URL: https://journals.savba.sk/index.php/studiapsychologica/article/view/2989/985
About article:
The main aim of our study was to investigate whether COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs are driven by a lack of useful and potentially protective mindware or by contaminated mindware. On the quota sample of 501 adult Slovaks, we also investigated whether personally relevant content improves scientific reasoning by using two versions of scientific reasoning tasks – one with coronavirus scenarios and one neutral, but we found no effect. While probabilistic reasoning and scientific knowledge negatively predict belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories, anti-scientific attitudes significantly contribute to their higher acceptance. Thus, addressing anti-scientific attitudes and developing probabilistic reasoning and scientific knowledge may be crucial to attenuate health-related conspiracy beliefs.
Supplementary documents:
How to cite:
ISO 690:
Sunyik, V., Čavojová, V. 2025. Health-Related Disinformation: Should We Focus More on Reducing the Mindware Gap or Corrupted Mindware?. In Studia Psychologica, vol. 67, no.2, pp. 121-136. 0039-3320. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/sp.2025.02.915
APA:
Sunyik, V., Čavojová, V. (2025). Health-Related Disinformation: Should We Focus More on Reducing the Mindware Gap or Corrupted Mindware?. Studia Psychologica, 67(2), 121-136. 0039-3320. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31577/sp.2025.02.915
About edition:
Publisher: Institute of Experimental Psychology, Center of Social and Psychological Sciences, Slovak Academy of Sciences
Published: 25. 6. 2025
Rights:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/