Zusammenfassung der Ressource
delusional disorder
- conspiracy theory
- claims
aren't able
to be
verified
- claims offer a less plausible
alternative to mainstream
- "they're deliberately
trying to fool you, not
accidental"
- If you believe in 1,
you're likely to
believe in others
- STUDY: BRITISH UNI X PRINCESS DIANA
- students beliefs in
conspiracy theories
assessed on 7 point
lLIKERT SCALE
- if you believed in ANY ONE, you
were more likely to endorse others
- 5 ITEMS related to Princess Diana's death
- If you believed it was an
accident, less likely to
believe in conspiracies
- STUDY: OSAMA
- 0,4 correlation between
"OBL is still alive" and "OBL
was already dead"
- you can't believe both
- BUT, they're both
mediated by "officials
are engaged in cover
up"
- take-home: conspiracies
remain alive because they
agree with HIGHER ORDER
OF CONSPIRACY
- WHO BELIEVES?
- personality factors
- distrust in authority
- lower self-esteem
- lower levels of interpersonal mistrust
- feeling of POWERLESSNESS
- HIGHER AMONG BLACKS
- door-to-door study
in Cali
- asked if HIV/AIDS
was a man-made
virus engineered to
kill Black People
- 27% of Blacks said yes
- TELEPHONE SURVEY
- assessed HIV/AIDS beliefs on
5-point LIKERT SCALE
- looked at
attitudes
towards
condoms
- looked at
condom-use
consistency
- looked at association of
attitudes of condoms and
use of condoms
- MEN= STRONGER
CONSPIRACY
BELIEFS, LESS LIKELY TO USE CONDOM
- 1932-1972
STUDY in
Southern US
- looked at
syphilis in Black
Males
- gov't held
treatment
from them
- were NOT given
penicilin even
thought it treated
it
- history of
mistrust=
BUILT
- STUDY: undergrads +
conspiracy beliefs
- pro-conspiracy
- endorsed climate change
conspiracies more
- tended to do LESS to
reduce carbon footprint
- take-home: conspiracy
theories and behaviour
relation
- anti-conspiracy
- control
- Paranoid Personality Disorder
- exaggerated
self-serving bias
- attention bias
toward
threat-related info
- "cycle of dysphoric
self-consciousness"
- hypervigilance, rumination
- activation of
paranoid cognitive
biases
- exarcebation of self-consciousnes
- appraisal of social situation
- dysphoric self-consciousness
- more rare than ppl who
believe in conspiracies
- MORE FLEXIBLE BELIEFS than
people with DELUSIONAL
DISORDER
- even rarer than PPD
- WITH BIZARRE CONTENT
- quantitative
assessment of
severity of
delusions
- on 5 point scale
- 0= not present, 4=
present and severe
- very rigid + fixed beliefs
- characteristics of a delusion
- UFRPDII
Anmerkungen:
- UNFOUNDED
FIRMLY HELD
RESISTANT TO CHANGE
PREOCCUPYING
DISTRESSING
INTERFERES WITH SOCIAL FUNCTIONING
INVOLVES PERSONAL REFERENCE
- LATER AGE OF ONSET
- 40-55 YRS
- stable over lifetime
- MORE FEMALES
- theories of delusions
- psychodynamic
- repressed homosexual tendencies
- ex. DANIEL SCHREBER
- "reaction formation"
- TOM
- how we infer what others are thinking
- STUDY: DD VS
HEALTHY
CONTROLS
- MORE PERSEVERATIVE
ERRORS ON WCST
- POORLY ON TOM TASK
- OK IN EMOTION RECOGNITION
- exec. function
deficits contribute to
TOM deficits
- no cognitive flex on proverb
- cognitive
- jump to conclusions
- attributional bias
- neurobiological
- REDUCED GREY
MATTER IN
TEMPORAL +
FRONTAL
AREAS
- INCREASED DA
TRANSMISSION
- LEFT HEMI OVERACTIVITY
- TREATMENT
- doubting paranoid beliefs
- recognizing delusional thoughts
- processing discomfirmatory evidence
- considering alternative explanations
- good prognosis
- females
- onset BEFORE 30
- persecutory, somatic,
erotic vs grandiose +
jealous