Većkalov, Bojana

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  • Većkalov, Bojana (3)
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Author's Bibliography

No evidence that priming analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories: A Registered Report of high-powered direct replications of Study 2 and Study 4 from Swami, Voracek, Stieger, Tran, and Furnham (2014)

Većkalov, Bojana; Gligorić, Vukašin; Petrović, Marija B.

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Većkalov, Bojana
AU  - Gligorić, Vukašin
AU  - Petrović, Marija B.
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5078
AB  - Analytic thinking is reliably associated with lower belief in conspiracy theories. However, evidence for whether increasing analytic thinking can reduce belief in conspiracies is sparse. As an exception to this, Swami et al. (2014) showed that priming analytical thinking through a verbal fluency task (i.e., scrambled sentence task) or a processing fluency manipulation (i.e., difficult-to-read fonts) reduced belief in conspiracy theories. To probe the robustness of these effects, in this Registered Report, we present two highly powered (i.e., 95%) direct replications of two of the original studies (i.e., Studies 2 and 4). We found no evidence that priming analytic thinking through the scrambled sentence task (N = 302), nor the difficult-to-read fonts (N = 488) elicited more analytic thinking, nor reduced belief in conspiracy theories. This work highlights the need for further research to identify effective ways of inducing analytic thinking in order to gauge its potential causal impact on belief in conspiracies.
T2  - Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
T1  - No evidence that priming analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories: A Registered Report of high-powered direct replications of Study 2 and Study 4 from Swami, Voracek, Stieger, Tran, and Furnham (2014)
SP  - 104549
VL  - 110
DO  - 10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104549
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Većkalov, Bojana and Gligorić, Vukašin and Petrović, Marija B.",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Analytic thinking is reliably associated with lower belief in conspiracy theories. However, evidence for whether increasing analytic thinking can reduce belief in conspiracies is sparse. As an exception to this, Swami et al. (2014) showed that priming analytical thinking through a verbal fluency task (i.e., scrambled sentence task) or a processing fluency manipulation (i.e., difficult-to-read fonts) reduced belief in conspiracy theories. To probe the robustness of these effects, in this Registered Report, we present two highly powered (i.e., 95%) direct replications of two of the original studies (i.e., Studies 2 and 4). We found no evidence that priming analytic thinking through the scrambled sentence task (N = 302), nor the difficult-to-read fonts (N = 488) elicited more analytic thinking, nor reduced belief in conspiracy theories. This work highlights the need for further research to identify effective ways of inducing analytic thinking in order to gauge its potential causal impact on belief in conspiracies.",
journal = "Journal of Experimental Social Psychology",
title = "No evidence that priming analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories: A Registered Report of high-powered direct replications of Study 2 and Study 4 from Swami, Voracek, Stieger, Tran, and Furnham (2014)",
pages = "104549",
volume = "110",
doi = "10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104549"
}
Većkalov, B., Gligorić, V.,& Petrović, M. B.. (2023). No evidence that priming analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories: A Registered Report of high-powered direct replications of Study 2 and Study 4 from Swami, Voracek, Stieger, Tran, and Furnham (2014). in Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 110, 104549.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104549
Većkalov B, Gligorić V, Petrović MB. No evidence that priming analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories: A Registered Report of high-powered direct replications of Study 2 and Study 4 from Swami, Voracek, Stieger, Tran, and Furnham (2014). in Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 2023;110:104549.
doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104549 .
Većkalov, Bojana, Gligorić, Vukašin, Petrović, Marija B., "No evidence that priming analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories: A Registered Report of high-powered direct replications of Study 2 and Study 4 from Swami, Voracek, Stieger, Tran, and Furnham (2014)" in Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 110 (2023):104549,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104549 . .
60
1

The globalizability of temporal discounting

Ruggeri, Kai; Panin, Amma; Vdovic, Milica; Većkalov, Bojana; Abdul-Salaam, Nazeer; Achtenberg, Jascha; Akil, Carla; Amatya, Jolly; Amatya, Kanchan; Andersen, Thomas; Aquino, Sibele; Arunasalam, Arjoon; Ashcroft-Jones, Sarah; Dahl Askelund, Adrian; Ayacaxli, Nelida; Bagheri Sheshdeh, Aseman; Bailey, Alexander; Barea Arroyo, Paula; Basulto Mejia, Genaro; Benvenuti, Martina; Berge, Mari Louise; Bermaganbet, Aliya; Bibilouri, Katherine; Bjorndal, Ludvig; Black, Sabrina; Blomster Lychol, Johanna; Brik, Tymofii; Buabang, Eike Kofi; Burghart, Matthias; Bursalioglu, Asli; Mesfin Buzayu, Naos; Čadek, Martin; Melo de Carvalho, Nathalia; Cazan, Ana-Maria; Cetincelik, Melis; Chai, Valentino; Chen, Patricia; Chen, Shiyi; Clay, Georgia; D'Ambrogio, Simone; Damjanovic, Kaja; Duffy, Grace; Dugue, Tatianna; Dwarkanath, Twinkle; Awazzi Envuladu, Esther; Erceg, Nikola; Esteban-Serna, Celia; Farahat, Eman; Farrokhnia, Robert; Fawad, Mareyba; Fedryansyah, Muhammad; Feng, David; Filippi, Silvia; Fonolia, Matias; Freichel, Rene; Freira, Lucia; Freidemann, Maja; Gao, Ziwei; Suwan, Ge; Geiger, Sandra; George, Leya; Grabovski, Iulia; Gracheva, Aleksandra; Grancheva, Anastasia; Hajian, Ali; Hasan, Nida; Hecht, Marlene; Hong, Xinyi; Hubena, Barbora; Ikonomeas, Alexander; Ilić, Sandra; Izydorczyk, David; Jakob, Lea; Janssens, Margo; Jarke, Hannes; Kacha, Ondrej; Nikolova Kalinova, Kalina; Mingiri Kapingura, Forget; Karakasheva, Ralitsa; Kasdan, David; Kemel, Emmanuel; Khorrami, Peggah; Krawiec, Jakub; Lagidze, Nato; Lazarević, Aleksandra; Lazić, Aleksandra; Seo Lee, Hyung; Lep, Žan; Lins, Samuel; Lofthus, Ingvild; Macchia, Lucia; Mamede, Salome; Ayele Mamo, Metasebiya; Maratkyzy, Laura; Mareva, Silvana; Marwaha, Shivika; McGill, Lucy; McParland, Sharon; Melnic, Anisoara; Meyer, Sebastian; Mizak, Sebastian; Mohammed, Amina; Mukhyshbayeva, Aizhan; Navajas, Joaquin; Neshevska, Dragana; Jamali Niazi, Shehrbano; Nieto, Ana; Nippold, Franziska; Oberschulte, Julia; Otto, Thiago; Pae, Riinu; Panchelieva, Tsvetelina; Young Park, Sun; Pascu, Daria Stefania; Pavlović, Irena; Petrović, Marija; Popović, Dora; Prinz, Gerhard; Rachev, Nikolay; Ranc, Pika; Razum, Josip; Eun Rho, Christina; Riitsalu, Leonore; Rocca, Federica; Rosenbaum, Shayna; Rujimora, James; Rusyidi, Binahayati; Rutherford, Charlotte; Said, Rand; Sanguino, Ines; Sarikaya, Ahmet Kerem; Say, Nicolas; Jakob, Jakob; Shiels, Mary; Shir, Yarden; Sievert, Elisabeth D.C.; Soboleva, Irina; Solomonia, Tina; Soni, Siddhant; Soysal, Irem; Stablum, Federica; Sundstrom, Felicia T.A.; Tang, Xintong; Tavera, Felice; Taylor, Jacqueline; Tebbe, Anna-Lena; Thommesen, Katrine; Tobbias-Webb, Juliette; Todsen, Anna; Toscano, Filippo; Tran, Tran; Trinh, Jason; Turati, Alice; Ueda, Kohei; Vacondio, Martina; Vakhitov, Volodymyr; Valencia, Adrianna; van Reyn, Chiara; Venema, Tina; Verra, Sanne; Vintr, Jachym; Vranka, Marek; Wagner, Lisa; Wu, Xue; Ying Xing, Ke; Xu, Kailin; Xu, Sonya; Yamada, Yuki; Yosifova, Aleksandra; Zupan, Zorana; Garcia-Garzon, Eduardo

(Nature Human Behaviour, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ruggeri, Kai
AU  - Panin, Amma
AU  - Vdovic, Milica
AU  - Većkalov, Bojana
AU  - Abdul-Salaam, Nazeer
AU  - Achtenberg, Jascha
AU  - Akil, Carla
AU  - Amatya, Jolly
AU  - Amatya, Kanchan
AU  - Andersen, Thomas
AU  - Aquino, Sibele
AU  - Arunasalam, Arjoon
AU  - Ashcroft-Jones, Sarah
AU  - Dahl Askelund, Adrian
AU  - Ayacaxli, Nelida
AU  - Bagheri Sheshdeh, Aseman
AU  - Bailey, Alexander
AU  - Barea Arroyo, Paula
AU  - Basulto Mejia, Genaro
AU  - Benvenuti, Martina
AU  - Berge, Mari Louise
AU  - Bermaganbet, Aliya
AU  - Bibilouri, Katherine
AU  - Bjorndal, Ludvig
AU  - Black, Sabrina
AU  - Blomster Lychol, Johanna
AU  - Brik, Tymofii
AU  - Buabang, Eike Kofi
AU  - Burghart, Matthias
AU  - Bursalioglu, Asli
AU  - Mesfin Buzayu, Naos
AU  - Čadek, Martin
AU  - Melo de Carvalho, Nathalia
AU  - Cazan, Ana-Maria
AU  - Cetincelik, Melis
AU  - Chai, Valentino
AU  - Chen, Patricia
AU  - Chen, Shiyi
AU  - Clay, Georgia
AU  - D'Ambrogio, Simone
AU  - Damjanovic, Kaja
AU  - Duffy, Grace
AU  - Dugue, Tatianna
AU  - Dwarkanath, Twinkle
AU  - Awazzi Envuladu, Esther
AU  - Erceg, Nikola
AU  - Esteban-Serna, Celia
AU  - Farahat, Eman
AU  - Farrokhnia, Robert
AU  - Fawad, Mareyba
AU  - Fedryansyah, Muhammad
AU  - Feng, David
AU  - Filippi, Silvia
AU  - Fonolia, Matias
AU  - Freichel, Rene
AU  - Freira, Lucia
AU  - Freidemann, Maja
AU  - Gao, Ziwei
AU  - Suwan, Ge
AU  - Geiger, Sandra
AU  - George, Leya
AU  - Grabovski, Iulia
AU  - Gracheva, Aleksandra
AU  - Grancheva, Anastasia
AU  - Hajian, Ali
AU  - Hasan, Nida
AU  - Hecht, Marlene
AU  - Hong, Xinyi
AU  - Hubena, Barbora
AU  - Ikonomeas, Alexander
AU  - Ilić, Sandra
AU  - Izydorczyk, David
AU  - Jakob, Lea
AU  - Janssens, Margo
AU  - Jarke, Hannes
AU  - Kacha, Ondrej
AU  - Nikolova Kalinova, Kalina
AU  - Mingiri Kapingura, Forget
AU  - Karakasheva, Ralitsa
AU  - Kasdan, David
AU  - Kemel, Emmanuel
AU  - Khorrami, Peggah
AU  - Krawiec, Jakub
AU  - Lagidze, Nato
AU  - Lazarević, Aleksandra
AU  - Lazić, Aleksandra
AU  - Seo Lee, Hyung
AU  - Lep, Žan
AU  - Lins, Samuel
AU  - Lofthus, Ingvild
AU  - Macchia, Lucia
AU  - Mamede, Salome
AU  - Ayele Mamo, Metasebiya
AU  - Maratkyzy, Laura
AU  - Mareva, Silvana
AU  - Marwaha, Shivika
AU  - McGill, Lucy
AU  - McParland, Sharon
AU  - Melnic, Anisoara
AU  - Meyer, Sebastian
AU  - Mizak, Sebastian
AU  - Mohammed, Amina
AU  - Mukhyshbayeva, Aizhan
AU  - Navajas, Joaquin
AU  - Neshevska, Dragana
AU  - Jamali Niazi, Shehrbano
AU  - Nieto, Ana
AU  - Nippold, Franziska
AU  - Oberschulte, Julia
AU  - Otto, Thiago
AU  - Pae, Riinu
AU  - Panchelieva, Tsvetelina
AU  - Young Park, Sun
AU  - Pascu, Daria Stefania
AU  - Pavlović, Irena
AU  - Petrović, Marija
AU  - Popović, Dora
AU  - Prinz, Gerhard
AU  - Rachev, Nikolay
AU  - Ranc, Pika
AU  - Razum, Josip
AU  - Eun Rho, Christina
AU  - Riitsalu, Leonore
AU  - Rocca, Federica
AU  - Rosenbaum, Shayna
AU  - Rujimora, James
AU  - Rusyidi, Binahayati
AU  - Rutherford, Charlotte
AU  - Said, Rand
AU  - Sanguino, Ines
AU  - Sarikaya, Ahmet Kerem
AU  - Say, Nicolas
AU  - Jakob, Jakob
AU  - Shiels, Mary
AU  - Shir, Yarden
AU  - Sievert, Elisabeth D.C.
AU  - Soboleva, Irina
AU  - Solomonia, Tina
AU  - Soni, Siddhant
AU  - Soysal, Irem
AU  - Stablum, Federica
AU  - Sundstrom, Felicia T.A.
AU  - Tang, Xintong
AU  - Tavera, Felice
AU  - Taylor, Jacqueline
AU  - Tebbe, Anna-Lena
AU  - Thommesen, Katrine
AU  - Tobbias-Webb, Juliette
AU  - Todsen, Anna
AU  - Toscano, Filippo
AU  - Tran, Tran
AU  - Trinh, Jason
AU  - Turati, Alice
AU  - Ueda, Kohei
AU  - Vacondio, Martina
AU  - Vakhitov, Volodymyr
AU  - Valencia, Adrianna
AU  - van Reyn, Chiara
AU  - Venema, Tina
AU  - Verra, Sanne
AU  - Vintr, Jachym
AU  - Vranka, Marek
AU  - Wagner, Lisa
AU  - Wu, Xue
AU  - Ying Xing, Ke
AU  - Xu, Kailin
AU  - Xu, Sonya
AU  - Yamada, Yuki
AU  - Yosifova, Aleksandra
AU  - Zupan, Zorana
AU  - Garcia-Garzon, Eduardo
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3994
AB  - Economic inequality is associated with preferences for smaller, immediate gains over larger, delayed ones. Such temporal discounting may feed into rising global inequality, yet it is unclear whether it is a function of choice preferences or norms, or rather the absence of sufficient resources for immediate needs. It is also not clear whether these reflect true differences in choice patterns between income groups. We tested temporal discounting and five intertemporal choice anomalies using local currencies and value standards in 61 countries (N = 13,629). Across a diverse sample, we found consistent, robust rates of choice anomalies. Lower-income groups were not significantly different, but economic inequality and broader financial circumstances were clearly correlated with population choice patterns.
PB  - Nature Human Behaviour
T2  - Nature Human Behavior
T1  - The globalizability of temporal discounting
EP  - 1397
IS  - 6
SP  - 1386
DO  - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-022-01392-w
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ruggeri, Kai and Panin, Amma and Vdovic, Milica and Većkalov, Bojana and Abdul-Salaam, Nazeer and Achtenberg, Jascha and Akil, Carla and Amatya, Jolly and Amatya, Kanchan and Andersen, Thomas and Aquino, Sibele and Arunasalam, Arjoon and Ashcroft-Jones, Sarah and Dahl Askelund, Adrian and Ayacaxli, Nelida and Bagheri Sheshdeh, Aseman and Bailey, Alexander and Barea Arroyo, Paula and Basulto Mejia, Genaro and Benvenuti, Martina and Berge, Mari Louise and Bermaganbet, Aliya and Bibilouri, Katherine and Bjorndal, Ludvig and Black, Sabrina and Blomster Lychol, Johanna and Brik, Tymofii and Buabang, Eike Kofi and Burghart, Matthias and Bursalioglu, Asli and Mesfin Buzayu, Naos and Čadek, Martin and Melo de Carvalho, Nathalia and Cazan, Ana-Maria and Cetincelik, Melis and Chai, Valentino and Chen, Patricia and Chen, Shiyi and Clay, Georgia and D'Ambrogio, Simone and Damjanovic, Kaja and Duffy, Grace and Dugue, Tatianna and Dwarkanath, Twinkle and Awazzi Envuladu, Esther and Erceg, Nikola and Esteban-Serna, Celia and Farahat, Eman and Farrokhnia, Robert and Fawad, Mareyba and Fedryansyah, Muhammad and Feng, David and Filippi, Silvia and Fonolia, Matias and Freichel, Rene and Freira, Lucia and Freidemann, Maja and Gao, Ziwei and Suwan, Ge and Geiger, Sandra and George, Leya and Grabovski, Iulia and Gracheva, Aleksandra and Grancheva, Anastasia and Hajian, Ali and Hasan, Nida and Hecht, Marlene and Hong, Xinyi and Hubena, Barbora and Ikonomeas, Alexander and Ilić, Sandra and Izydorczyk, David and Jakob, Lea and Janssens, Margo and Jarke, Hannes and Kacha, Ondrej and Nikolova Kalinova, Kalina and Mingiri Kapingura, Forget and Karakasheva, Ralitsa and Kasdan, David and Kemel, Emmanuel and Khorrami, Peggah and Krawiec, Jakub and Lagidze, Nato and Lazarević, Aleksandra and Lazić, Aleksandra and Seo Lee, Hyung and Lep, Žan and Lins, Samuel and Lofthus, Ingvild and Macchia, Lucia and Mamede, Salome and Ayele Mamo, Metasebiya and Maratkyzy, Laura and Mareva, Silvana and Marwaha, Shivika and McGill, Lucy and McParland, Sharon and Melnic, Anisoara and Meyer, Sebastian and Mizak, Sebastian and Mohammed, Amina and Mukhyshbayeva, Aizhan and Navajas, Joaquin and Neshevska, Dragana and Jamali Niazi, Shehrbano and Nieto, Ana and Nippold, Franziska and Oberschulte, Julia and Otto, Thiago and Pae, Riinu and Panchelieva, Tsvetelina and Young Park, Sun and Pascu, Daria Stefania and Pavlović, Irena and Petrović, Marija and Popović, Dora and Prinz, Gerhard and Rachev, Nikolay and Ranc, Pika and Razum, Josip and Eun Rho, Christina and Riitsalu, Leonore and Rocca, Federica and Rosenbaum, Shayna and Rujimora, James and Rusyidi, Binahayati and Rutherford, Charlotte and Said, Rand and Sanguino, Ines and Sarikaya, Ahmet Kerem and Say, Nicolas and Jakob, Jakob and Shiels, Mary and Shir, Yarden and Sievert, Elisabeth D.C. and Soboleva, Irina and Solomonia, Tina and Soni, Siddhant and Soysal, Irem and Stablum, Federica and Sundstrom, Felicia T.A. and Tang, Xintong and Tavera, Felice and Taylor, Jacqueline and Tebbe, Anna-Lena and Thommesen, Katrine and Tobbias-Webb, Juliette and Todsen, Anna and Toscano, Filippo and Tran, Tran and Trinh, Jason and Turati, Alice and Ueda, Kohei and Vacondio, Martina and Vakhitov, Volodymyr and Valencia, Adrianna and van Reyn, Chiara and Venema, Tina and Verra, Sanne and Vintr, Jachym and Vranka, Marek and Wagner, Lisa and Wu, Xue and Ying Xing, Ke and Xu, Kailin and Xu, Sonya and Yamada, Yuki and Yosifova, Aleksandra and Zupan, Zorana and Garcia-Garzon, Eduardo",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Economic inequality is associated with preferences for smaller, immediate gains over larger, delayed ones. Such temporal discounting may feed into rising global inequality, yet it is unclear whether it is a function of choice preferences or norms, or rather the absence of sufficient resources for immediate needs. It is also not clear whether these reflect true differences in choice patterns between income groups. We tested temporal discounting and five intertemporal choice anomalies using local currencies and value standards in 61 countries (N = 13,629). Across a diverse sample, we found consistent, robust rates of choice anomalies. Lower-income groups were not significantly different, but economic inequality and broader financial circumstances were clearly correlated with population choice patterns.",
publisher = "Nature Human Behaviour",
journal = "Nature Human Behavior",
title = "The globalizability of temporal discounting",
pages = "1397-1386",
number = "6",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-022-01392-w"
}
Ruggeri, K., Panin, A., Vdovic, M., Većkalov, B., Abdul-Salaam, N., Achtenberg, J., Akil, C., Amatya, J., Amatya, K., Andersen, T., Aquino, S., Arunasalam, A., Ashcroft-Jones, S., Dahl Askelund, A., Ayacaxli, N., Bagheri Sheshdeh, A., Bailey, A., Barea Arroyo, P., Basulto Mejia, G., Benvenuti, M., Berge, M. L., Bermaganbet, A., Bibilouri, K., Bjorndal, L., Black, S., Blomster Lychol, J., Brik, T., Buabang, E. K., Burghart, M., Bursalioglu, A., Mesfin Buzayu, N., Čadek, M., Melo de Carvalho, N., Cazan, A., Cetincelik, M., Chai, V., Chen, P., Chen, S., Clay, G., D'Ambrogio, S., Damjanovic, K., Duffy, G., Dugue, T., Dwarkanath, T., Awazzi Envuladu, E., Erceg, N., Esteban-Serna, C., Farahat, E., Farrokhnia, R., Fawad, M., Fedryansyah, M., Feng, D., Filippi, S., Fonolia, M., Freichel, R., Freira, L., Freidemann, M., Gao, Z., Suwan, G., Geiger, S., George, L., Grabovski, I., Gracheva, A., Grancheva, A., Hajian, A., Hasan, N., Hecht, M., Hong, X., Hubena, B., Ikonomeas, A., Ilić, S., Izydorczyk, D., Jakob, L., Janssens, M., Jarke, H., Kacha, O., Nikolova Kalinova, K., Mingiri Kapingura, F., Karakasheva, R., Kasdan, D., Kemel, E., Khorrami, P., Krawiec, J., Lagidze, N., Lazarević, A., Lazić, A., Seo Lee, H., Lep, Ž., Lins, S., Lofthus, I., Macchia, L., Mamede, S., Ayele Mamo, M., Maratkyzy, L., Mareva, S., Marwaha, S., McGill, L., McParland, S., Melnic, A., Meyer, S., Mizak, S., Mohammed, A., Mukhyshbayeva, A., Navajas, J., Neshevska, D., Jamali Niazi, S., Nieto, A., Nippold, F., Oberschulte, J., Otto, T., Pae, R., Panchelieva, T., Young Park, S., Pascu, D. S., Pavlović, I., Petrović, M., Popović, D., Prinz, G., Rachev, N., Ranc, P., Razum, J., Eun Rho, C., Riitsalu, L., Rocca, F., Rosenbaum, S., Rujimora, J., Rusyidi, B., Rutherford, C., Said, R., Sanguino, I., Sarikaya, A. K., Say, N., Jakob, J., Shiels, M., Shir, Y., Sievert, E. D.C., Soboleva, I., Solomonia, T., Soni, S., Soysal, I., Stablum, F., Sundstrom, F. T.A., Tang, X., Tavera, F., Taylor, J., Tebbe, A., Thommesen, K., Tobbias-Webb, J., Todsen, A., Toscano, F., Tran, T., Trinh, J., Turati, A., Ueda, K., Vacondio, M., Vakhitov, V., Valencia, A., van Reyn, C., Venema, T., Verra, S., Vintr, J., Vranka, M., Wagner, L., Wu, X., Ying Xing, K., Xu, K., Xu, S., Yamada, Y., Yosifova, A., Zupan, Z.,& Garcia-Garzon, E.. (2022). The globalizability of temporal discounting. in Nature Human Behavior
Nature Human Behaviour.(6), 1386-1397.
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-022-01392-w
Ruggeri K, Panin A, Vdovic M, Većkalov B, Abdul-Salaam N, Achtenberg J, Akil C, Amatya J, Amatya K, Andersen T, Aquino S, Arunasalam A, Ashcroft-Jones S, Dahl Askelund A, Ayacaxli N, Bagheri Sheshdeh A, Bailey A, Barea Arroyo P, Basulto Mejia G, Benvenuti M, Berge ML, Bermaganbet A, Bibilouri K, Bjorndal L, Black S, Blomster Lychol J, Brik T, Buabang EK, Burghart M, Bursalioglu A, Mesfin Buzayu N, Čadek M, Melo de Carvalho N, Cazan A, Cetincelik M, Chai V, Chen P, Chen S, Clay G, D'Ambrogio S, Damjanovic K, Duffy G, Dugue T, Dwarkanath T, Awazzi Envuladu E, Erceg N, Esteban-Serna C, Farahat E, Farrokhnia R, Fawad M, Fedryansyah M, Feng D, Filippi S, Fonolia M, Freichel R, Freira L, Freidemann M, Gao Z, Suwan G, Geiger S, George L, Grabovski I, Gracheva A, Grancheva A, Hajian A, Hasan N, Hecht M, Hong X, Hubena B, Ikonomeas A, Ilić S, Izydorczyk D, Jakob L, Janssens M, Jarke H, Kacha O, Nikolova Kalinova K, Mingiri Kapingura F, Karakasheva R, Kasdan D, Kemel E, Khorrami P, Krawiec J, Lagidze N, Lazarević A, Lazić A, Seo Lee H, Lep Ž, Lins S, Lofthus I, Macchia L, Mamede S, Ayele Mamo M, Maratkyzy L, Mareva S, Marwaha S, McGill L, McParland S, Melnic A, Meyer S, Mizak S, Mohammed A, Mukhyshbayeva A, Navajas J, Neshevska D, Jamali Niazi S, Nieto A, Nippold F, Oberschulte J, Otto T, Pae R, Panchelieva T, Young Park S, Pascu DS, Pavlović I, Petrović M, Popović D, Prinz G, Rachev N, Ranc P, Razum J, Eun Rho C, Riitsalu L, Rocca F, Rosenbaum S, Rujimora J, Rusyidi B, Rutherford C, Said R, Sanguino I, Sarikaya AK, Say N, Jakob J, Shiels M, Shir Y, Sievert ED, Soboleva I, Solomonia T, Soni S, Soysal I, Stablum F, Sundstrom FT, Tang X, Tavera F, Taylor J, Tebbe A, Thommesen K, Tobbias-Webb J, Todsen A, Toscano F, Tran T, Trinh J, Turati A, Ueda K, Vacondio M, Vakhitov V, Valencia A, van Reyn C, Venema T, Verra S, Vintr J, Vranka M, Wagner L, Wu X, Ying Xing K, Xu K, Xu S, Yamada Y, Yosifova A, Zupan Z, Garcia-Garzon E. The globalizability of temporal discounting. in Nature Human Behavior. 2022;(6):1386-1397.
doi:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-022-01392-w .
Ruggeri, Kai, Panin, Amma, Vdovic, Milica, Većkalov, Bojana, Abdul-Salaam, Nazeer, Achtenberg, Jascha, Akil, Carla, Amatya, Jolly, Amatya, Kanchan, Andersen, Thomas, Aquino, Sibele, Arunasalam, Arjoon, Ashcroft-Jones, Sarah, Dahl Askelund, Adrian, Ayacaxli, Nelida, Bagheri Sheshdeh, Aseman, Bailey, Alexander, Barea Arroyo, Paula, Basulto Mejia, Genaro, Benvenuti, Martina, Berge, Mari Louise, Bermaganbet, Aliya, Bibilouri, Katherine, Bjorndal, Ludvig, Black, Sabrina, Blomster Lychol, Johanna, Brik, Tymofii, Buabang, Eike Kofi, Burghart, Matthias, Bursalioglu, Asli, Mesfin Buzayu, Naos, Čadek, Martin, Melo de Carvalho, Nathalia, Cazan, Ana-Maria, Cetincelik, Melis, Chai, Valentino, Chen, Patricia, Chen, Shiyi, Clay, Georgia, D'Ambrogio, Simone, Damjanovic, Kaja, Duffy, Grace, Dugue, Tatianna, Dwarkanath, Twinkle, Awazzi Envuladu, Esther, Erceg, Nikola, Esteban-Serna, Celia, Farahat, Eman, Farrokhnia, Robert, Fawad, Mareyba, Fedryansyah, Muhammad, Feng, David, Filippi, Silvia, Fonolia, Matias, Freichel, Rene, Freira, Lucia, Freidemann, Maja, Gao, Ziwei, Suwan, Ge, Geiger, Sandra, George, Leya, Grabovski, Iulia, Gracheva, Aleksandra, Grancheva, Anastasia, Hajian, Ali, Hasan, Nida, Hecht, Marlene, Hong, Xinyi, Hubena, Barbora, Ikonomeas, Alexander, Ilić, Sandra, Izydorczyk, David, Jakob, Lea, Janssens, Margo, Jarke, Hannes, Kacha, Ondrej, Nikolova Kalinova, Kalina, Mingiri Kapingura, Forget, Karakasheva, Ralitsa, Kasdan, David, Kemel, Emmanuel, Khorrami, Peggah, Krawiec, Jakub, Lagidze, Nato, Lazarević, Aleksandra, Lazić, Aleksandra, Seo Lee, Hyung, Lep, Žan, Lins, Samuel, Lofthus, Ingvild, Macchia, Lucia, Mamede, Salome, Ayele Mamo, Metasebiya, Maratkyzy, Laura, Mareva, Silvana, Marwaha, Shivika, McGill, Lucy, McParland, Sharon, Melnic, Anisoara, Meyer, Sebastian, Mizak, Sebastian, Mohammed, Amina, Mukhyshbayeva, Aizhan, Navajas, Joaquin, Neshevska, Dragana, Jamali Niazi, Shehrbano, Nieto, Ana, Nippold, Franziska, Oberschulte, Julia, Otto, Thiago, Pae, Riinu, Panchelieva, Tsvetelina, Young Park, Sun, Pascu, Daria Stefania, Pavlović, Irena, Petrović, Marija, Popović, Dora, Prinz, Gerhard, Rachev, Nikolay, Ranc, Pika, Razum, Josip, Eun Rho, Christina, Riitsalu, Leonore, Rocca, Federica, Rosenbaum, Shayna, Rujimora, James, Rusyidi, Binahayati, Rutherford, Charlotte, Said, Rand, Sanguino, Ines, Sarikaya, Ahmet Kerem, Say, Nicolas, Jakob, Jakob, Shiels, Mary, Shir, Yarden, Sievert, Elisabeth D.C., Soboleva, Irina, Solomonia, Tina, Soni, Siddhant, Soysal, Irem, Stablum, Federica, Sundstrom, Felicia T.A., Tang, Xintong, Tavera, Felice, Taylor, Jacqueline, Tebbe, Anna-Lena, Thommesen, Katrine, Tobbias-Webb, Juliette, Todsen, Anna, Toscano, Filippo, Tran, Tran, Trinh, Jason, Turati, Alice, Ueda, Kohei, Vacondio, Martina, Vakhitov, Volodymyr, Valencia, Adrianna, van Reyn, Chiara, Venema, Tina, Verra, Sanne, Vintr, Jachym, Vranka, Marek, Wagner, Lisa, Wu, Xue, Ying Xing, Ke, Xu, Kailin, Xu, Sonya, Yamada, Yuki, Yosifova, Aleksandra, Zupan, Zorana, Garcia-Garzon, Eduardo, "The globalizability of temporal discounting" in Nature Human Behavior, no. 6 (2022):1386-1397,
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-022-01392-w . .

Belief in conspiracy theories and paranoia – An attempt at empirically separating the constructs

Većkalov, Bojana; Petrović, Marija; Gligorić, Vukašin; Žeželj, Iris

(Institute of Psychology, Laboratory for Experimental Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade: Belgrade, Serbia, 2019)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Većkalov, Bojana
AU  - Petrović, Marija
AU  - Gligorić, Vukašin
AU  - Žeželj, Iris
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5086
AB  - Attributing sinister motives to others can be manifested on either a personal level – as paranoia,
or a societal level – as belief in conspiracy theories (CTs). Whilst more interpersonal forms of
paranoia were proposed to be triggered by a threat coming from other individuals (ingroup
threat), belief in CTs should be triggered by a threat from the other groups (outgroup threat).
In a previous study of the effects of outgroup threat on belief in CTs, there was significant
overlap in content of the threat and CTs it was supposed to evoke, which makes it difficult to
discern priming effects from genuine effects of the threat on belief in CTs. For this reason, we
conducted two studies (total N = 207) that varied in the extent of overlap between the threat
manipulation and CTs and paranoia scales. In both studies, psychology students first read either
a bogus scientific article about fierce competition and climate of distrust between psychology
students and psychologists (ingroup threat) or between psychologists and economists (outgroup threat), while the control group read no such article. After this, all participants filled out two
paranoia and two belief in CTs scales. Finally, we asked them to assess the extent of negative
emotions elicited by the articles. In Study 1, there was no overlap in content between the threat
manipulation and scales of belief in CTs/paranoia. In contrast, Study 2 was conducted to test if
certain overlap in content could influence the results – we modified one of the scales for both
belief in CTs and paranoia so that the items reflected CTs, or personal actions against
psychologists, respectively. Results from both studies reveal that, while the threats were rated
as believable and they were effective in eliciting negative emotions (Study 1: F(2, 88) = 13.62,
p < .001; Study 2: F(2, 112) = 4.75, p = .01), they did not influence belief in CTs/paranoia –
i.e. even with an overlap between the manipulations and the scales, there was no effect.
Additionally, moderate positive correlations (r range across both studies: .27 – .42; p < .01)
between paranoia and belief in CTs indicate they may be hard to separate experimentally.
Taken together, our results illustrate challenges that arise in experimentally testing theoretical
distinctions between the content participants perceive as similar, and in employing brief state
manipulations to influence aspects of participant’s global world-view.
PB  - Institute of Psychology, Laboratory for Experimental Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade: Belgrade, Serbia
C3  - Book of Abstracts, XXV scientific conference Empirical Studies in Psychology
T1  - Belief in conspiracy theories and paranoia – An attempt at empirically separating the constructs
EP  - 108
SP  - 107
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5086
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Većkalov, Bojana and Petrović, Marija and Gligorić, Vukašin and Žeželj, Iris",
year = "2019",
abstract = "Attributing sinister motives to others can be manifested on either a personal level – as paranoia,
or a societal level – as belief in conspiracy theories (CTs). Whilst more interpersonal forms of
paranoia were proposed to be triggered by a threat coming from other individuals (ingroup
threat), belief in CTs should be triggered by a threat from the other groups (outgroup threat).
In a previous study of the effects of outgroup threat on belief in CTs, there was significant
overlap in content of the threat and CTs it was supposed to evoke, which makes it difficult to
discern priming effects from genuine effects of the threat on belief in CTs. For this reason, we
conducted two studies (total N = 207) that varied in the extent of overlap between the threat
manipulation and CTs and paranoia scales. In both studies, psychology students first read either
a bogus scientific article about fierce competition and climate of distrust between psychology
students and psychologists (ingroup threat) or between psychologists and economists (outgroup threat), while the control group read no such article. After this, all participants filled out two
paranoia and two belief in CTs scales. Finally, we asked them to assess the extent of negative
emotions elicited by the articles. In Study 1, there was no overlap in content between the threat
manipulation and scales of belief in CTs/paranoia. In contrast, Study 2 was conducted to test if
certain overlap in content could influence the results – we modified one of the scales for both
belief in CTs and paranoia so that the items reflected CTs, or personal actions against
psychologists, respectively. Results from both studies reveal that, while the threats were rated
as believable and they were effective in eliciting negative emotions (Study 1: F(2, 88) = 13.62,
p < .001; Study 2: F(2, 112) = 4.75, p = .01), they did not influence belief in CTs/paranoia –
i.e. even with an overlap between the manipulations and the scales, there was no effect.
Additionally, moderate positive correlations (r range across both studies: .27 – .42; p < .01)
between paranoia and belief in CTs indicate they may be hard to separate experimentally.
Taken together, our results illustrate challenges that arise in experimentally testing theoretical
distinctions between the content participants perceive as similar, and in employing brief state
manipulations to influence aspects of participant’s global world-view.",
publisher = "Institute of Psychology, Laboratory for Experimental Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade: Belgrade, Serbia",
journal = "Book of Abstracts, XXV scientific conference Empirical Studies in Psychology",
title = "Belief in conspiracy theories and paranoia – An attempt at empirically separating the constructs",
pages = "108-107",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5086"
}
Većkalov, B., Petrović, M., Gligorić, V.,& Žeželj, I.. (2019). Belief in conspiracy theories and paranoia – An attempt at empirically separating the constructs. in Book of Abstracts, XXV scientific conference Empirical Studies in Psychology
Institute of Psychology, Laboratory for Experimental Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade: Belgrade, Serbia., 107-108.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5086
Većkalov B, Petrović M, Gligorić V, Žeželj I. Belief in conspiracy theories and paranoia – An attempt at empirically separating the constructs. in Book of Abstracts, XXV scientific conference Empirical Studies in Psychology. 2019;:107-108.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5086 .
Većkalov, Bojana, Petrović, Marija, Gligorić, Vukašin, Žeželj, Iris, "Belief in conspiracy theories and paranoia – An attempt at empirically separating the constructs" in Book of Abstracts, XXV scientific conference Empirical Studies in Psychology (2019):107-108,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5086 .