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a??These Are Just Stories, Muldera??: Exposure to Conspiracist Fiction Does Not Produce Narrative Persuasion

机译:a《这些只是故事,穆德拉》:阴谋小说的曝光不会产生叙事的说服力

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Narrative persuasion, i.e., the impact of narratives on beliefs, behaviors and attitudes, and the mechanisms underpinning endorsement of conspiracy theories have both drawn substantial attention from social scientists. Yet, to date, these two fields have evolved separately, and to our knowledge no study has empirically examined the impact of conspiracy narratives on real-world conspiracy beliefs. In a first study, we exposed a group of participants (n = 37) to an X-Files episode before asking them to fill in a questionnaire related to their narrative experience and conspiracy beliefs. A control group (n = 41) had to answer the conspiracy beliefs items before watching the episode. Based on past findings of both the aforementioned fields of research, we hypothesized that the experimental group would show greater endorsement of conspiracy beliefs, an effect expected to be mediated by identification to the episodes' characters. We furthermore hypothesized that identification would be associated with cognitive elaboration of the topics developed in the narrative. The first two hypotheses were disproved since no narrative persuasion effect was observed. In a second study, we sought to replicate these results in a larger sample (n = 166). No persuasive effect was found in the new data and a Bayesian meta-analysis of the two studies strongly supports the absence of a positive effect of exposure to narrative material on endorsement of conspiracy theories. In both studies, a significant relation between conspiracy mentality and enjoyment was observed. In the second study, this relation was fully mediated by two dimensions of perceived realism, i.e., plausibility and narrative consistency. We discuss our results, based on theoretical models of narrative persuasion and compare our studies with previous narrative persuasion studies. Implications of these results for future research are also discussed.
机译:叙事说服力,即叙事对信念,行为和态度的影响,以及对阴谋论的认可的机制,都引起了社会科学家的广泛关注。然而,迄今为止,这两个领域是分别发展的,据我们所知,尚无任何研究以实证研究方式来检验阴谋叙述对现实世界中阴谋信仰的影响。在第一个研究中,我们让一组参与者(n = 37)暴露于X档案事件中,然后要求他们填写与他们的叙述经历和阴谋信念有关的问卷。对照组(n = 41)在观看剧集之前必须回答共谋信念项目。根据上述两个研究领域的以往发现,我们假设实验组将显示出更多对阴谋信念的认可,这种效果有望通过识别情节特征来介导。我们进一步假设,认同将与叙述中发展的话题的认知阐述相关联。由于没有观察到说服力,所以前两个假设被驳斥。在第二项研究中,我们试图将这些结果复制到更大的样本中(n = 166)。在新数据中未发现有说服力,对这两项研究的贝叶斯荟萃分析强烈支持了缺乏叙述性材料对阴谋理论的认可的积极作用。在两项研究中,都发现了阴谋心态与享受之间的重要关系。在第二项研究中,这种关系完全由感知现实主义的两个维度来调解,即合理性和叙述一致性。我们根据叙事说服的理论模型讨论我们的研究结果,并将我们的研究与以前的叙事说服研究进行比较。还讨论了这些结果对未来研究的影响。

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