Dataset for: Pummerer, Ditrich, Winter, & Sassenberg (accepted). Think About It! Deliberation Reduces the Negative Relation Between Conspiracy Belief and Adherence to Prosocial Norms. Social Psychological and Personality Science.

DOI

People believing in conspiracy theories question mainstream thoughts and behavior, but it is unknown whether it is also linked to lower adherence to the prosocial norms of the broader society. Furthermore, interventions targeting correlates of the belief in conspiracy theories so far are scarce. In four preregistered, mixed-design experiments (Ntotal = 1,659, Nobservations = 8,902), we tested whether believing in conspiracy theories is related to lower prosocial norm adherence and whether deliberation about the reason for the norms mitigates this relationship. Across four studies with the U.S. samples, we found that believing in conspiracy theories correlated negatively with prosocial norm adherence in the control condition, which was less pronounced after deliberation (effect size of interaction: d = 0.16). Whether the norm was related to the law or not did not moderate this effect. Results point toward possible ways of mitigating negative correlates and potentially also consequences of believing in conspiracy theories.

Dataset for: Pummerer, L., Ditrich, L., Winter, K., & Sassenberg, K. (2022). Think About It! Deliberation Reduces the Negative Relation Between Conspiracy Belief and Adherence to Prosocial Norms. Social Psychological and Personality Science. https://doi.org/10.1177/19485506221144150

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12210
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.23668/psycharchives.12210
Provenance
Creator Pummerer, Lotte; Ditrich, Lara; Winter, Kevin; Sassenberg, Kai
Publisher PsychArchives
Contributor Leibniz Institut Für Psychologie (ZPID)
Publication Year 2022
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Dataset
Discipline Social Sciences