| Literature DB >> 28922387 |
R Kelly Garrett1, Brian E Weeks2.
Abstract
Widespread misperceptions undermine citizens' decision-making ability. Conclusions based on falsehoods and conspiracy theories are by definition flawed. This article demonstrates that individuals' epistemic beliefs-beliefs about the nature of knowledge and how one comes to know-have important implications for perception accuracy. The present study uses a series of large, nationally representative surveys of the U.S. population to produce valid and reliable measures of three aspects of epistemic beliefs: reliance on intuition for factual beliefs (Faith in Intuition for facts), importance of consistency between empirical evidence and beliefs (Need for evidence), and conviction that "facts" are politically constructed (Truth is political). Analyses confirm that these factors complement established predictors of misperception, substantively increasing our ability to explain both individuals' propensity to engage in conspiracist ideation, and their willingness to embrace falsehoods about high-profile scientific and political issues. Individuals who view reality as a political construct are significantly more likely to embrace falsehoods, whereas those who believe that their conclusions must hew to available evidence tend to hold more accurate beliefs. Confidence in the ability to intuitively recognize truth is a uniquely important predictor of conspiracist ideation. Results suggest that efforts to counter misperceptions may be helped by promoting epistemic beliefs emphasizing the importance of evidence, cautious use of feelings, and trust that rigorous assessment by knowledgeable specialists is an effective guard against political manipulation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28922387 PMCID: PMC5603156 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Epistemic beliefs item wording.
| I trust my gut to tell me what’s true and what’s not | |
| I trust my initial feelings about the facts | |
| My initial impressions are almost always right | |
| I can usually feel when a claim is true or false even if I can’t explain how I know | |
| Evidence is more important than whether something feels true | |
| A hunch needs to be confirmed with data | |
| I trust the facts, not my instincts, to tell me what is true | |
| I need to be able to justify my beliefs with evidence | |
| Facts are dictated by those in power | |
| What counts as truth is defined by power | |
| Scientific conclusions are shaped by politics | |
| “Facts” depend on their political context | |
Response options range from “strongly disagree” to “strongly agree”, with “neither agree nor disagree” as the midpoint.
Conspiracist ideation (OSoC 2016).
| Statement | Endorsing conspiracy |
|---|---|
| The assassination of John F. Kennedy was not committed by the lone gunman Lee Harvey Oswald but was rather a detailed organized conspiracy to kill the President. | 45.7% |
| The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. was the result of an organized conspiracy by U.S. government agencies such as the CIA and FBI. | 33.1 |
| Princess Diana’s death was not an accident but rather an organized assassination by members of the British royal family who disliked her. | 32.1 |
| A powerful and secretive group known as the New World Order are planning to eventually rule the world through an autonomous world government which would replace sovereign governments. | 30.7 |
| The U.S. government allowed the 9–11 attacks to take place so that it would have an excuse to achieve foreign (e.g., wars in Afghanistan and Iraq) and domestic (e.g., attacks on civil liberties) goals that had been determined prior to the attacks. | 23.9 |
| U.S. agencies intentionally created the AIDS epidemic and administered it to Black and gay men in the 1970s. | 22.8 |
| The Apollo moon landings never happened and were staged in a Hollywood film studio. | 15.3 |
Response options range from “definitely not true” (1) to “definitely true” (9). Scores higher than 5 are treated as an endorsement for this table.
Beliefs about issues (NSF 2016).
| Statement | |
|---|---|
| Human activity is contributing to changes in the global climate (5)—Human activity has no influence on global climate (1) | 3.69 |
| Most Muslims support violence against Western countries, including the U.S.(1)—Most Muslims oppose violence against Western countries, including the U.S. (5) | 3.46 |
| Iraq had weapons of mass destruction immediately before the Iraq war began (1)—Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction immediately before the Iraq war began (5) | 3.13 |
| Vaccines cause autism (1)—Vaccination is unrelated to autism (5) | 3.75 |
Responses scored from 1 (most inaccurate) to 5 (most accurate), with a score of 3 indicating ambivalence or uncertainty about what is true.
Beliefs about issues (NSF 2016).
| 2016 OSoC | 0.956 | 0.061 | 0.048 |
| 2016 NSF, Wave 1 | 0.963 | 0.050 | 0.045 |
| 2016 NSF, Wave 2 | 0.959 | 0.057 | 0.049 |
| 2016 NSF, Wave 3 | 0.960 | 0.052 | 0.050 |
a. Based on a three-item measure of Truth is political (excluding Poli4)
Epistemological belief composite scores, descriptives and zero-order correlations with related concepts.
| FI-facts | Need for evidence | Truth is political | n | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | 5.52 (1.56) | 5.88 (1.24) | 4.55 (1.89) | 606 |
| Min.—Max. | 1–9 | 1.8–9 | 1–9 | 606 |
| Skew | -.24 | .-46 | .08 | 606 |
| Kurtosis | .13 | .11 | -.41 | 606 |
| Ideology (Conservatism) | .16 | -.04 | .22 | 606 |
| Party (Republican affiliation) | .08 | -.05 | .19 | 606 |
| Trump supporter | .11 | .07 | .20 | 606 |
| Education | -.13 | .18 | -.11 | 606 |
| Political interest | -.11 | .23 | -.04 | 606 |
| Religious fundamentalism | .22 | -.24 | .23 | 507 |
| M (SD) | 3.28 (.64) | 3.74 (.71) | 3.03 (.77) | 947 |
| Min.—Max. | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 | 947 |
| Skew | .02 | -.34 | -.04 | 947 |
| Kurtosis | .61 | .23 | .15 | 947 |
| Ideology (Conservatism) | .12 | -.09 | .17 | 942 |
| Party (Republican affiliation) | .08 | -.04 | .19 | 942 |
| Trump supporter | .10 | -.00 | .25 | 947 |
| Conservative site use | .04 | .06 | .08 | 947 |
| Liberal site use | -.03 | .15 | -.08 | 947 |
| Political interest | -.05 | .23 | .01 | 944 |
| Education | -.05 | .21 | -.08 | 947 |
| Need for Cognition | -.20 | .11 | -.21 | 947 |
a. Trait measured in a subsequent wave.
* p < .05,
** p < .01
Fig 1Scatterplots with locally weighted regression lines.
Values shown are for composite scales. Size of marker corresponds to number of cases. Fit lines drawn using iterative least squares (Loess) with 50% of the data points to calculate the local smoother via the Epanechnikov kernel function. Fit lines suggest a modest linear relationship between conspiracist ideation and each of the three epistemic beliefs.
Fig 2Structural equation model summarizing factors associated with conspiracist ideation.
Circles denote latent variables; education is manifest. All links shown are standardized and significant; p < .02. Except for education, manifest variables and their loadings are not shown. Disturbances on endogenous factors are also omitted from the figure. Path coefficients for all three epistemic beliefs measures indicate that these factors have an influence on conspiracist ideation that is comparable to or larger than other established predictors.
Structural equation models summarizing factors associated with lagged issue accuracy.
| Climate change | Muslim attitudes | WMDs in Iraq | Vaccine safety | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.07 (.05) | -0.02 (.05) | -0.10 (.05) | -0.05 (.05) | |
| 0.16 (.04) | 0.20 (.05) | 0.19 (.05) | 0.21 (.05) | |
| -0.12 (.04) | -0.20 (.05) | -0.07 (.05) | -0.17 (.05) | |
| Ideology (Conservatism) | -0.36 (.04) | -0.30 (.04) | -0.28 (.04) | -0.06 (.04) |
| Political attention | -0.07 (.05) | 0.07 (.05) | 0.08 (.05) | 0.15 (.05) |
| # cons. sites used | -0.21 (.04) | -0.07 (.04) | -0.14 (.04) | -0.07 (.04) |
| # lib. sites used | 0.14 (.03) | 0.02 (.04) | 0.15 (.04) | 0.02 (.05) |
| Education | 0.02 (.04) | 0.05 (.04) | 0.00 (.04) | 0.03 (.04) |
| Need for cognition | -0.04 (.05) | -0.03 (.06) | -0.02 (.06) | -0.05 (.05) |
| Goodness of Fit | ||||
| GoF improvement: | ||||
| Epistemic beliefs | ||||
| 0.31 | 0.26 | 0.25 | 0.15 | |
| Δ | 0.03 | 0.06 | 0.04 | 0.06 |
| 625 | 625 | 625 | 625 |
Outcomes are measured in wave 3, epistemic beliefs in wave 2. Cell values show standardized coefficients (SE).
a. Manifest variables (all others are latent).
* p < .05,
** p < .01,
*** p < .001