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Covid-19: the psychology of conspiracy theories

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    [Music]
    Intro: The Guardian
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    Welcome to Science Weekly.
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    We're following the Covid-19 outbreak and
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    exploring some of the scientific questions
    that have come out of it.
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    In today's episode, we are looking
    at conspiracy theories:
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    >> Now, many people are getting
    their information about coronavirus
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    through social media.
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    But not everything that's shared online
    can be trusted.
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    >> 5G messed on fire >> **** the 5G!
    >> Yeah!
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    >> It lowers your immunity
    and runs people down!
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    >> The coronavirus pandemic is opening up
    weird new horizons
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    for online conspiracy theorists.
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    >> The virus was bio-engineered in a lab
    by scientists, to be used as a weapon
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    or a form of population control.
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    >> Hi guys, do you know
    what you're doing now?
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    You're laying 5G. >> Yes.
    >> So, you know that kills people?
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    >> It absorbs oxygen.
    >> That's just nonsense!
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    Dangerous nonsense as well.
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    >> 5G was a favorite target
    of conspiracy theorists,
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    long before the new coronavirus appeared.
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    And now the myths have just been tweaked a
    bit.
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    >> It's not merely an opinion
    or an interesting conspiracy,
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    it's just bollocks.
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    >> So what is it about conspiracy theories
    that makes them so appealing
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    in a time of crisis?
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    And how can we best combat them?
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    I'm Ian Sample, the science editor
    at The Guardian
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    and this is Science Weekly.
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    >> I'm Dr Daniel Jolley.
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    I'm a senior lecturer in psychology
    based at Northumberland University
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    in Newcastle in the UK and my expertise is
    in the psychology of conspiracy theories.
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    (IS) Hi Dan, how are you doing?
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    (DJ) I'm doing well,
    thanks so much for having me here.
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    (IS) So Dan, let's start with the basics:
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    what is a conspiracy theory,
    as opposed to misinformation, say?
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    (DJ) So the whole difference
    with a conspiracy theory is the idea
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    that there is a powerful group plotting
    something secret for their own gain,
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    So something can just be fake, that
    there is no hidden motive behind it.
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    I mean there is a cardinal difference:
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    it's pointing the finger
    at a group of people
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    and blaming them for their wrongdoings:
    blaming them for the virus, for example.
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    (IS) What is it about conspiracy theories,
    generally,
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    that makes them so appealing to us?
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    (DJ) Well, conspiracy theories in general
    have been shown to arise
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    in moments of crisis, when we have the
    need to feel in control, to feel certain.
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    And in these kind of rapid crises
    we feel threatened,
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    we feel unsure what is happening,
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    which is exactly what is happening
    with Covid-19
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    (IS) I always thought that believing
    in conspiracy theories
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    would make people feel more anxious,
    but it sounds like, actually,
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    they have the opposite effect.
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    (DJ) Well, it's a really interesting
    point there.
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    People who have this need to feel
    in control,
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    the influence on them actually may
    just be quite temporal.
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    They may seem appealing,
    but they're not satisfying.
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    Covid has shown that people who are
    exposed to conspiracy theories
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    actually have further mistrust
    of those around them.
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    It actually increases their feeling
    of anxiety.
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    Often it is because if you don't subscribe
    to one conspiracy belief,
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    you then start questioning other things,
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    which means its kind of ramping up
    your mistrust,
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    and you kind of feel a feeling of
    uncertainty of you living in your society.
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    So when they emerge in times of crisis,
    they may temporarily
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    make us feel more secure
    but that will not be long-lasting.
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    (IS) This must be
    a bit of a boom time for you,
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    as someone who studies conspiracy theories
    I mean, we've seen, you know,
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    a bunch of them around recently,
    from 5G masts,
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    man-made viruses coming out of
    Chinese labs, I mean,
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    what is it about a pandemic
    that seems to drive so many?
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    (DJ) Covid-19 is not unique in regards to
    having conspiracy theories bloom about it.
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    Thinking back to zika, 2015,
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    there were conspiracy theories suggesting
    zika was a man-made weapon.
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    >> Zika is a mosquito-transmitted virus
    that has lead to travel warnings
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    in South America and Caribbean countries.
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    >> Is zika caused by
    genetically modified mosquitoes?
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    We're fact-checking this conspiracy theory
    making the rounds on Facebook.
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    (DJ) It's fair that the conspiracy now to
    emerge,
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    when people are talking about extreme
    uncertainty.
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    So when they felt uncertain, they now (??)
    conspiracy theories was more blooming.
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    And the same thing is happening with
    COVID-19.
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    >> The Trump administration has repeatedly
    pushed the narrative that the Coronavirus
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    may have escaped from a Chinese laboratory
    in Wuhan, rather than originating with an
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    animal in a seafood market in Wuhan, which
    is the leading medical theory.
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    (DJ) Because the world is definitely chaotic,
    and it offers some kind of tangible,
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    personal group to blame for what is
    happening.
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    (IS) It sounds like, then, that it's
    pretty typical to see conspiracy theories
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    spring up around any big event.
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    Do you think we're just seeing more now,
    or we're aware of more now, because
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    they're spreading through social media?
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    (DJ) There's no hard data that
    demonstrates that today with the
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    internet, conspiracy theories are more
    popular. So it may just be us assuming
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    they are. I think it's important, though,
    to really look into this, and to see the
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    peril that social media can have. Thinking
    about the 5g conspiracy, it seemed to
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    emerge from social media, where the
    algorithms and Facebook picked up chatter
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    with regards to 5g, and brought it into
    the trending. And then, during videos
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    people in the comments were talking about
    the masks and how one way to stop COVID is
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    by the masks and pulling them down, etc.
    So that's something that's potentially
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    quite novel in that that fast interaction
    may have actually sped up the kind of
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    insurgence of the conspiracy.
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    (DJ) It's a real interesting problem with
    regards to Facebook, and social media in
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    general, and how they deal with conspiracy
    theories, because someone's conspiracy
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    theory is someone's truth, in essence. So
    it's how do we define what a conspiracy
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    theory is. And indeed, by banning, for
    example, conspiracy theories on platforms
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    will just reaffirm the suspicions that
    people have, that they're trying to hide
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    something, so you may actually increase
    people's conspiracy theorizing, because
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    they are being silenced. So it's that
    balance of insuring there's a space and a
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    platform for people to have free speech,
    to be able to discuss issues, and to, you
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    know, question things, which I think is
    important that we question, but then the
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    balance comes by that things aren't made
    into the trending pages that are not based
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    on truth. So right now, Facebook and etc.,
    are taking down content that they see to
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    be inciting violence, and that can
    actually be a hinder to curbing COVID-19,
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    which is think is a positive first step,
    but it's not going to fix the issue as a
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    broad issue in the future.
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    So maybe,
    thinking about the individual as well,
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    and insuring the individual has the skill
    sets to really ask the questions, but also
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    evaluate the evidence. So we know those
    people who lack critical thinking
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    abilities are more likely to believe in
    conspiracy theories, and we also know that
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    people who in believe in conspiracies is
    because they want to understand their
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    world, but they're struggling to evaluate
    the evidence. So potentially us trying to
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    instill those skill sets may mean that
    they're able to resist the conspiracy narrative.
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    (IS) Let's talk a bit more about the
    psychology of people who believe in
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    conspiracy theories or tend to believe in
    them, are there characteristics or
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    personality traits that make people maybe
    more susceptible to these kinds of
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    theories than others?
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    (DJ) There are a range of different needs
    that are met by conspiracy theories,
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    while there's also kind of a social
    element whereby we want to affirm
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    ourselves and also the groups that we
    belong in, and interestingly, research in
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    America has found that in regards to
    politics, the conspiracy theories switch
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    depending on who is in power. So it's very
    much a (??) in play here, where you're
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    just affirming your identity. The others,
    those are the ones who are conspiring,
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    and that can change depending on the
    context.
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    (IS) It sounds like some other sort of
    traits might come into play as well around
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    how people see themselves, their social
    self-image, but also where the people have
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    been sort of marginalized in the past.
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    (DJ) Absolutely. So, research has found
    that being a narcissist is more predictive
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    of you believing in conspiracy theories,
    and also, it has been shown that people
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    who are from disadvantaged groups,
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    because if you have received
    discrimination in the past,
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    you may be more likely to perceive
    that people are out to get you.
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    Because once upon a time, maybe they were.
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    So prior experiences may also play a role
    in making you more susceptible.
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    And then, when you're in an environment
    that increases your uncertainty,
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    increases your threat, like COVID-19,
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    you may be more susceptible
    to subscribe to these conspiracy theories.
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    And indeed, a consistent finding
    in the literature is
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    that if you believe in one conspiracy,
    you believe in many others.
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    Also, interestingly,
    researchers find that
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    you can believe in mutually exclusive
    conspiracy theories, because it's all
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    based around this world view that (??)
    conspiracy theories in the world, so that
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    means that someone may believe that the
    virus was human-made, but also believing
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    it is caused by 5g. Whilst these two
    things can't necessarily happen at the
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    same time, it's in this process if you
    feel distrust, of society, of people who
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    we see to be in power, you can subscribe
    to these ideas.
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    (IS) When I've seen conspiracy theorists
    talking about their beliefs, it's clear
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    that there's a real urge to pull together
    strands of evidence, and to collect
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    evidence, and say, pull together these
    sort of desperate things, and many of them
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    seem to see themselves as like, the real
    critical thinkers, but I'm wondering what
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    kind of biases are coming into play there,
    that are actually within those people, to
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    make them believe these kinds of theories.
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    (DJ) One of the biases is confirmation
    bias, that we're all susceptible to.
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    This is the idea that we only really
    listen to evidence that supports our prior
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    beliefs. Things that go against it, that
    discredit our beliefs, we ignore.
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    There's also biases based around
    personality bias, with COVID-19, it's such
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    a large event, worldwide, to explain this
    as something from animals doesn't really
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    make sense. But to explain this as a
    conspiracy where it was human-made,
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    the proportionality matches the cause,
    it all kind of fits together.
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    So, we can, in situations where these
    events arise, be more drawn to conspiracy
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    narratives. We then stay in our echo
    chambers in our online world.
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    (IS) It can be tough debating and arguing
    with people who believe in conspiracy
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    theories, and okay, some of them are
    harmless, but some of them really aren't.
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    I mean, as someone who really studies
    them, do you have a sense of how best
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    we can combat them, the ones that are
    dangerous?
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    (DJ) Interventions are really challenging,
    but of course, as you say, they're really
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    important, so potentially targeting the
    general population, and targeting those
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    who are hardened conspiracy theorists,
    may be slightly different.
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    So for example, we know that using (??)
    arguments, giving people facts, can reduce
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    belief in conspiracy theories. But, if you
    harbor a conspiracy belief, and you see
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    some kind of material from the government,
    you are going to discredit that, because
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    of your confirmation bias. So indeed, for
    others, it may be having people become
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    trusted messengers, where you're not
    aggressive, but instead, talk to them
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    about their beliefs, get them to really
    kind of think hard about the evidence
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    that they are, you know, really kind of
    suggesting is the be and end all, and
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    that maybe that kind of thinking process
    and get them to re-evaluate may start
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    changing their beliefs. Of course, this
    I'm sure would work for the general
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    population as well, so I think with
    ensuring that the landscape on Twitter, on
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    Facebook is full of facts is really
    important, but then still acknowledging
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    that those who are on the hardened end
    of the conspiracy theorizing may distrust
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    that straight away. So it's definitely a
    challenge, but I think it's important to
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    really evaluate.
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    (IS) Dan, finally, how do you think you
    fair in all of this? I mean, do you feel
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    you're immune to conspiracy theories that
    you can tell pretty much on contact
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    whether something's real or BS?
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    (DJ) It's really difficult to tell the
    truth from the untruthful, from the fake
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    news, but the conspiracy's always based
    around pointing the finger at those in
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    authority, and suggesting that they are
    conspiring. I try and have trust in the
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    gatekeepers, where I also trust the
    journalists, who ask the questions, and
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    the conspiracy theories that have been
    proven to be true, have always been driven
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    by journalism. So, having the trust in our
    society that if a conspiracy is occuring,
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    it will come out by these natural
    processes.
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    (IS) Wonderful stuff. Dan, thank you so
    much for joining us.
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    (DJ) Pleasure, thank you so much.
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    (IS) Thanks to Dan for joining me this
    week. As we continue to follow the
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    COVID-19 outbreak, we'd love to keep
    hearing your questions. You can send them
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    in via the form we've set up, just head
    over to theguardian.com/covid19questions,
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    that's all one word.
    And also thank those who support
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    as listeners.
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    In times like this, trusted news is more
    important than ever, and here at the
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    Guardian we are 100% committed to
    accurate and reliable news, but in order
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    to help us do that, we need your support.
    To find out more, please go to
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    theguardian.com/supportpodcast, again
    all one word.
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    Look after yourselves and stay well,
    see you back here soon.
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    [Outro]
    For more great podcasts from the Guardian,
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    just go to theguardian.com/podcasts.
Title:
Covid-19: the psychology of conspiracy theories
Description:

Guardian Podcast
Science Weekly -Psychology
Presented by Ian Sample and produced by David Waters and Madeleine Finlay
Tue 5 May 2020 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/science/audio/2020/may/05/covid-19-the-psychology-of-conspiracy-theories

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
15:09

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