logo
How it worksCoursesResearch CommunitiesBenefitsAbout Us
Schedule Demo
Learn Before
  • Conspiracy Theories

    Concept icon
Relation

The Verifiability Continuum

Verifiable beliefs are generally more associated with knowledge motivation, while unverifiable beliefs are more associated with social integration motivation. Both serve ego-defense functions.

Image 0

0

1

Updated 2021-06-24

Contributors are:

Megan Rush
Megan Rush
🏆 1

Who are from:

University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
🏆 1

References


  • Conspiracy beliefs: Knowledge, ego-defense, and social integration

Tags

Psychology

Social Science

Empirical Science

Science

Related
  • The Verifiability Continuum

  • Predictors of Conspiracy Theories

  • Generic Conspiracist Beliefs scale (GCB)

    Concept icon
  • Negative connotations of the term "Conspiracy Theory"

    Concept icon
  • Positive connotations of the term "Conspiracy Theory"

    Concept icon
  • The Pizza Gate Conspiracy

    Concept icon
  • Predictors for Conspiracist Thinking

    Concept icon
  • Banas and Miller (2013): Types of arguments against conspiracy theories and their effectiveness

    Concept icon
  • Jolley and Douglas (2014): The gap between changing beliefs and changing behavior

    Concept icon
  • The direct effect of the consumption of conspiracy materials on subsequent behavior

    Concept icon
  • The effect of order of argument presentation in combating conspiracy theories

    Concept icon
  • Why People May Believe Conspiracy Theories

  • Why conspiracy theories are difficult to disprove

Learn After
  • Verifiable vs Unverifiable Information

logo 1cademy1Cademy

Optimize Scalable Learning and Teaching

How it worksCoursesResearch CommunitiesBenefitsAbout Us
TermsPrivacyCookieGDPR

Contact Us

iman@honor.education

Follow Us




© 1Cademy 2026

We're committed to OpenSource on

Github