The role of epistemic trust and epistemic disruption in vaccine hesitancy, conspiracy thinking and the capacity to identify fake news.

Publication date: Dec 04, 2024

Epistemic trust – defined as readiness to regard knowledge, communicated by another agent, as significant, relevant to the self, and generalizable to other contexts-has recently been applied to the field of developmental psychopathology as a potential risk factor for psychopathology. The work described here sought to investigate how the vulnerability engendered by disruptions in epistemic trust may not only impact psychological resilience and interpersonal processes but also aspects of more general social functioning. We undertook two studies to examine the role of epistemic trust in determining capacity to recognise fake/real news, and susceptibility to conspiracy thinking-both in general and in relation to COVID-19. Measuring three different epistemic dispositions-trusting, mistrusting and credulous-in two studies (study 1, n = 705; study 2 n = 502), we found that Credulity was associated with inability to discriminate between fake/real news. We also found that both Mistrust and Credulity mediated the relationship between exposure to childhood adversity and difficulty in distinguishing between fake/real news, although the effect sizes were small. Finally, Mistrust and Credulity were associated with general and COVID-19 related conspiracy beliefs and vaccine hesitancy. We discuss the implications of these findings for our understanding of fake news and conspiracy thinking.

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Concepts Keywords
Childhood Capacity
Covid Conspiracy
Psychopathology Covid
Vaccine Credulity
Epistemic
Fake
Found
General
Hesitancy
Mistrust
News
Psychopathology
Real
Thinking
Vaccine

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO role
disease IDO susceptibility
disease MESH COVID-19
pathway REACTOME Reproduction
drug DRUGBANK Tretamine
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease MESH marital status
disease MESH ARC
drug DRUGBANK 3 7 11 15-Tetramethyl-Hexadecan-1-Ol
drug DRUGBANK Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
disease MESH impulsivity
disease MESH education level
disease MESH uncertainty
disease MESH traumatic childhood experiences
drug DRUGBANK Methyl isocyanate
drug DRUGBANK Cysteamine
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH sexual abuse
drug DRUGBANK Ranitidine
drug DRUGBANK Proline
disease MESH tics
disease MESH causality
drug DRUGBANK Nimesulide
disease MESH Borderline personality disorder
disease MESH personality disorder
disease MESH posttraumatic stress disorder
disease MESH loneliness
drug DRUGBANK L-Lysine
disease IDO process

Original Article

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