4.5 Article

When do conspiracy theories shape behavioural intentions? The moderating role of the need to evaluate

Journal

PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
Volume 218, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2023.112481

Keywords

Conspiracy theories; Intentions; Need to evaluate; Climate change; Vaccination; COVID-19; Pro-environmental behaviour

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Conspiracy theories can have detrimental effects on individuals' behavior. This study explores the relationship between exposure to conspiracy theories and behavioral intentions, and the moderating role of the need to evaluate (NE). Results indicate that exposure to conspiracy narratives increases specific conspiracy beliefs, which in turn affect behavioral intentions, particularly for individuals with a high need to evaluate.
Conspiracy theories can have detrimental effects on individuals' behaviour in various domains. Understanding when conspiracy beliefs affect behavioural intentions could help in tackling the negative consequences of conspiracy theories. We investigated how experimentally manipulating exposure to conspiracy theories affects individuals' specific conspiracy beliefs and, in turn, their behavioural intentions. Additionally, we tested the moderating role of the need to evaluate (NE), the dispositional tendency to engage in evaluative responding. We expected that the relationship between experimentally strengthened conspiracy beliefs and behavioural intentions would be stronger for high- (vs. low-) NE individuals. Across two studies (total N = 578), exposure to a conspiracy narrative increased specific conspiracy beliefs, which then affected behavioural intentions, but more strongly for those with a high (vs. low) need to evaluate. We find support for our conceptual model across two contexts (climate change, vaccination). Overall, these studies shed light on how the NE shapes the process by which exposure to conspiracy theories affects behavioural intentions, thereby suggesting that accounting for variables related to attitudes and other evaluative responses can help explain when conspiracy beliefs translate into behavioural intentions. These findings could potentially help inform interventions aimed at reducing the negative effects of conspiracy theories.

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