Gerret von Nordheim, Tina Bettels-Schwabbauer, Katharina Kleinen-von Königslöw, Paulina Barczyszyn-Madziarz, Halyna Budivska, Philip Di Salvo, Filip Dingerkus, Liziane Soares Guazina, Kwaku Krobea Asante, Michał Kuś, Sandra Lábová, Antonia Matei, Norbert Merkovity, Fernando Oliveira Paulino, László Petrovszki-Oláh, Michael Yao Wodui Serwornoo, Jonas Valente, Alexandra Wake & Viktória Zakinszky Toma. (2023) The different worlds of Google – A comparison of search results on conspiracy theories in 12 countries. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies.
Crossref
Carleigh Davis, Ryan Cheek, Kathryn Dolan & Rachel Schneider. (2023) Mapping the DNA of Conspiracy Theories: Analyzing Key Nodes Across Digital Geographies. Mapping the DNA of Conspiracy Theories: Analyzing Key Nodes Across Digital Geographies.
Homero Gil de Zúñiga, Rebecca Scheffauer & Bingbing Zhang. (2023) Cable News Use and Conspiracy Theories: Exploring Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC Effects on People’s Conspiracy Mentality. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, pages 107769902311719.
Crossref
Benjamin J. Dow, Cynthia S. Wang & Jennifer A. Whitson. (2023) Support for leaders who use conspiratorial rhetoric: The role of personal control and political identity. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 104, pages 104403.
Crossref
Christian Schemer, Marc Ziegele, Tanjev Schultz, Oliver Quiring, Nikolaus Jackob & Ilka Jakobs. (2021) Political Information Use and Its Relationship to Beliefs in Conspiracy Theories Among the German Public. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 99:4, pages 908-929.
Crossref
Marten Scheffer, Denny Borsboom, Sander Nieuwenhuis & Frances Westley. (2022) Belief traps: Tackling the inertia of harmful beliefs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119:32.
Crossref
Afonso de Albuquerque, Thaiane M Oliveira, Marcelo A dos Santos Jr, Rodrigo Quinan & Daniela Mazur. (2022) Coronavirus meets the clash of civilizations. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 28:4, pages 1198-1213.
Crossref
Kareem Darwish. (2022) News Consumption in Time of Conflict: 2021 Palestinian-Israel War as an Example. News Consumption in Time of Conflict: 2021 Palestinian-Israel War as an Example.
Annemarie S Walter & Hugo Drochon. (2020) Conspiracy Thinking in Europe and America: A Comparative Study. Political Studies 70:2, pages 483-501.
Crossref
Thaiane Oliveira, Zijun Wang & Jingxin Xu. (2022) Scientific Disinformation in Times of Epistemic Crisis: Circulation of Conspiracy Theories on Social Media Platforms. Online Media and Global Communication 1:1, pages 164-186.
Crossref
Simão Ferreira, Carlos Campos, Beatriz Marinho, Susana Rocha, Eduardo Fonseca-Pedrero & Nuno Barbosa Rocha. (2022) What drives beliefs in COVID-19 conspiracy theories? The role of psychotic-like experiences and confinement-related factors. Social Science & Medicine 292, pages 114611.
Crossref
Daniel Röchert, German Neubaum, Björn Ross & Stefan Stieglitz. (2022) Caught in a networked collusion? Homogeneity in conspiracy-related discussion networks on YouTube. Information Systems 103, pages 101866.
Crossref
Michael Hattersley, Gordon D.A. Brown, John Michael & Elliot A. Ludvig. (2022) Of tinfoil hats and thinking caps: Reasoning is more strongly related to implausible than plausible conspiracy beliefs. Cognition 218, pages 104956.
Crossref
Matteo Vergani, Greg Barton & Yenny Wahid. 2022. Countering Violent and Hateful Extremism in Indonesia. Countering Violent and Hateful Extremism in Indonesia
29
62
.
Moreno Mancosu & Federico Vegetti. (2020) “Is It the Message or the Messenger?”: Conspiracy Endorsement and Media Sources. Social Science Computer Review 39:6, pages 1203-1217.
Crossref
Qiusi Sun, Magdalena Wojcieszak & Sam Davidson. (2021) Over-Time Trends in Incivility on Social Media: Evidence From Political, Non-Political, and Mixed Sub-Reddits Over Eleven Years. Frontiers in Political Science 3.
Crossref
Tianru Guan, Tianyang Liu & Randong Yuan. (2021) Facing disinformation: Five methods to counter conspiracy theories amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Comunicar 29:69, pages 71-83.
Crossref
Jacob William Justice. 2021. Rationalist Bias in Communication Theory. Rationalist Bias in Communication Theory
208
226
.
Alexander Haas & Hans-Bernd Brosius. 2021. Digitaler Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit. Digitaler Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit
493
506
.
Imke HenkelImke Henkel. 2021. Destructive Storytelling. Destructive Storytelling
151
185
.
Tatiana Lionço. 2020. Direitos em disputa: LGBTI+, poder e diferença no Brasil contemporâneo. Direitos em disputa: LGBTI+, poder e diferença no Brasil contemporâneo
373
392
.
Leonhard Hennen. 2020. European E-Democracy in Practice. European E-Democracy in Practice
47
91
.
Ryan Hagen. (2019) Collisions Between Institutional and Populist Risk Imaginaries: The “Dark Side” of Negative Asymmetric Thinking. Sociological Forum 34:S1, pages 1235-1250.
Crossref
Gad Yair. (2019) The Conspiracist Strategy: Lessons from American Alternative Health Promotions. European journal of American studies 14:2.
Crossref
Stephanie Kelley-Romano & Kathryn L. Carew. (2019) Make America Hate Again: Donald Trump and the Birther Conspiracy. Journal of Hate Studies 14:1, pages 33-52.
Crossref
Karen M. Douglas, Joseph E. Uscinski, Robbie M. Sutton, Aleksandra Cichocka, Turkay Nefes, Chee Siang Ang & Farzin Deravi. (2019) Understanding Conspiracy Theories. Political Psychology 40:S1, pages 3-35.
Crossref
Philip Feldman, Aaron Dant & Wayne Lutters. (2018) This One Simple Trick Disrupts Digital Communities. This One Simple Trick Disrupts Digital Communities.
Joseph DiGrazia. (2017) The Social Determinants of Conspiratorial Ideation. Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World 3, pages 237802311668979.
Crossref
Fabian Gebauer, Marius H. Raab & Claus‐Christian Carbon. (2016) Conspiracy Formation Is in the Detail: On the Interaction of Conspiratorial Predispositions and Semantic Cues. Applied Cognitive Psychology 30:6, pages 917-924.
Crossref
Molly M. Greenwood, Mary E. Sorenson & Benjamin R. Warner. (2016) Ferguson on Facebook: Political persuasion in a new era of media effects. Computers in Human Behavior 57, pages 1-10.
Crossref
Kieron O'Hara & David Stevens. (2015) Echo Chambers and Online Radicalism: Assessing the Internet's Complicity in Violent Extremism. Policy & Internet 7:4, pages 401-422.
Crossref
Viren Swami, Martin Voracek, Stefan Stieger, Ulrich S. Tran & Adrian Furnham. (2014) Analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories. Cognition 133:3, pages 572-585.
Crossref
Ahmed Ezzeldin Mohamed. (2017) Believing Conspiracy Theories : Causes, Effects and Processes from a Comparative Empirical Perspective. SSRN Electronic Journal.
Crossref