Karen Douglas

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Person.png Karen DouglasRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(academic, editor)
Karen Douglas.jpg
Member ofCOMPACT - Comparative Analysis of Conspiracy Theories
Interestsconspiracy theories
An academic interested in why people believe in "conspiracy theories"

Professor Karen M. Douglas is an academic interested in "conspiracy theories". She has over 100 publications.[1] She has been widely cited by commercially-controlled media[2] on topics such as COVID-19. She reports that "Once people firmly believe in conspiracy theories, it is very difficult to convince them otherwise. At the moment, we don't know a great deal about what works."[3]

Career

As of 2020 Karen Douglas was working in the School of Psychology at the University of Kent.[4]

Interests

Douglas reports "My primary research focus is on beliefs in conspiracy theories. I am also interested in the social psychology of human communication, including the psychology of sexist language, and communication on the Internet."[5]

 

Quotes by Karen Douglas

PageQuoteDateSource
"Conspiracy theory/Academic research"“Work in online misinformation details how alternative media intentionally fabricate conspiracy theories, spreading false allegations ranging from reptilian presidents to staged terrorist attacks”June 2017Current Directions in Psychological Science https://www.researchgate.net/publication/317401748 The Psychology of Conspiracy Theories
"Conspiracy theory/Academic research"“history has repeatedly shown that corporate and political elites do conspire against public interests. Conspiracy theories play an important role in bringing their misdeeds into the light.”June 2017Current Directions in Psychological Science https://www.researchgate.net/publication/317401748 The Psychology of Conspiracy Theories
"Conspiracy theory/Academic research"“they are emotional given that negative emotions and not rational deliberations cause conspiracy beliefs... One limitation... is that the field is lacking a solid theoretical framework that contextualizes previous findings, that enables novel predictions, and that suggests interventions to reduce the prevalence of conspiracy theories in society.”2018Belief in conspiracy theories: Basic principles of an emerging research domain https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2530
Conspiracy belief“belief in conspiracy theories is positively associated with intuitive rather than analytic thinking. Consistently, higher education predicts lower conspiracy beliefs, a finding that is partly mediated by a tendency among the less educated to attribute agency and intentionality where it does not exist, and stronger analytic thinking skills among the higher educated.”2018Belief in conspiracy theories: Basic principles of an emerging research domain
Conspiracy theories/Academic research/Projectionthey are emotional given that negative emotions and not rational deliberations cause conspiracy beliefs; and they are social as conspiracy beliefs are closely associated with psychological motivations underlying intergroup conflict”2018Belief in conspiracy theories: Basic principles of an emerging research domain
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References


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