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Session Submission Type: Created Panel
More than ever, conspiracy theories and misinformation present as major challenges to the future of democratic governance around the world. As technologies permit increasingly realistic misinformation and as channels of communication increase in scope and speed, these challenges will grow.
Admissions-as-Corrections Reduce Belief in Election Conspiracy Theories - James Fahey, University of Memphis
Conspiracy Theories and Public Opinion: Evidence from the Turkish Elections - Cengiz Erisen, Yeditepe University; Joanne Miller, University of Delaware
Countering Misinformation to Establish Credibility: Two Non-WEIRD Cases - Cengiz Erisen, Yeditepe University; Sung-youn Kim, Seoul National Univesity; Elif Erisen, Yeditepe University; Yuksel Alper Ecevit, Bahçeşehir University
Ethnicity as Conspiracy Theory - Mohsen Jalali, Midwestern State University
Predicting Misinformation Belief: The Roles of Empathy and Intellectual Humility - Brooke Molokach, University of Delaware; Dannagal G. Young, University of Delaware