The paper creates a battery of items involving conspiracy theories and factor analyses them to find the underlying dimensions of conspiracy theoretic beliefs. The author shows a pattern of dependence to these underlying dimensions, for example finding individuals that are high in flat earth theory are also high in general conspiracy scores, but the reverse ordering is not true. The authors suggest this may imply information about the epistemological journey that people take towards conspiracy theoryies. I greatly enjoyed the paper. There are many details of interest, such as the negative relationship between belief in the validity of IQ tests and the propensity to believe Jewish conspiracies.
There are some areas where I thought the reasoning to be unclear or potentially faulty. Moreover, there were some writing errors that should be ironed out before publication (e.g. notes left in from when drafting the manuscript). As such, I recommend revising the manuscript before it can be accepted.
Below I’ve written a series of comments I had whilst going through the paper.
It is also unknown whether different varieties of conspiracist belief are predicted by different psychological variables. For instance, groups that vary widely in educational attainment may nonetheless believe the same conspiracy theory at similar rates, as demonstrated in King et al. 2021.
The second sentence does not follow the first here. That King et al. (2021) found a u-shaped relationship between education and vaccine hesitancy does not seem too related to the fact that we don’t know if beliefs in different types of conspiracy theory are predicted by different psychological traits. Maybe make clear what the logic is here - ie. conspiracy theories may not have a simple, monotnic relationship with IQ/SES as one might expect?
The survey is flawed, however, as respondents may have equally conspiracist beliefs regarding extraterrestrials and yet get coded in opposite ways. For instance, some conspiracy theorists believe that the existence of aliens is being covered up, while others believe that aliens are a hoax as part of a psychological operation. Compared to the mainstream position – that governments are telling the truth about the nonexistence of aliens – both positions are equally conspiratorial, and yet only those who believe in the existence of aliens would score highly on this factor, which makes up 20% of the score on this assessment. Consequently, the Extraterrestrial Cover-Up factor correlates least with the overall scale score, at 0.73, while the other four factors correlate at a minimum of 0.87 (average 0.90).
I think flawed is a strong word and I don’t think it is a major issue. The explanation of your critique is a little unclear. I think you are arguing that having multiple items measuring contradictory conspiracy beliefs undermines the validity of the scale. The reasoning of this is not too clear to me.
Thus far no studies have made an effort to assemble a large variety of questions representative of the diverse range of conspiracist beliefs that are endorsed by self-identified conspiracy theorists. Mutually contradictory questions are included, such as that JFK was assassinated by multiple shooters or that his death was faked, to reflect that fact that multiple mutually exclusive conspiracy theories may exist about the same event.
I don’t think this is really a problem, conspiracists will respond yes to one of the two items and non-believers will respond no to both items. Either way adding up lots of items like these should get you a good measure of someone’s level of belief in conspiracy theories. In fact, including such contradictory items might be useful to capturing the various dimensions of conspiracy belief.
Previous research has also treated conspiracist belief as a monological construct due to the high correlation between individual questions on surveys. While it is true that there is a central dimension of conspiracist belief, the present study indicates that conspiracist belief is comprised of distinct constellations of beliefs, likely with different epistemological and psychological foundations.
Monological is the wrong word here. See the definition here: https://www.oed.com/dictionary/monological_adj?tl=true
I think saying previous research has viewed conspiracist belief as unidimensional, or fail tp discuss it’s factor structure might be more accurate. Besides, I don’t think your criticism is correct in light of Brotherton’s study which performs exploratory factor analysis on conspiracist beliefs and identifies multiple factors, as you mention.
A total of 191 respondents completed the survey. 15 surveys were discarded due to the respondent failing the survey validation question
What’s the validation question?
The age range was 15 to 100, with a mean of 42.9 and a standard deviation of 16.
It might be useful to see the summary statistics visually or in a plot. An age of 100 sounds like an error or someone giving troll answers. It might good to know this was unusual. And the rest of the respondents were under 80 perhaps.
It is not possible to say what percent of the total variance is accounted for by the six-factor model due to the correlated nature of the extracted factors, however the first six principal components collectively explained 65.61% of the total variance.
I think this is incorrect. It is possible to report the variance explained by multiple, correlated latent factors.
In Table 2 it looks as though the below items were used in computing the latent variables. This seems to contradict the Methods section. If the items were not used to compute the factors, I think their correlations with the latent factors should be reported separately.
62. IQ tests are not a valid measurement of intelligence.
38. Jesus was a real historical person
I think you should probably label the axes in Figure 3. I’m not familiar with the method, but one axis will capture more variation than the other, so that should be made clear
Comments on writing errors
Although many psychological constructs have been assessed for their correlation with conspiracist belief, no research has specifically assessed the correlation between trust in elites and authorities and conspiracism.
I find this claim unlikely. From a very quick search of Google Scholar I can find a study relating trust in political elites to conspiracy beliefs.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/spsr.12270
“the unnecessary assumption of conspiracy when other explanations are more probable”(Aaronovitch,...
Missing a space between the quote and citation
as demonstrated in King et al. 2021.
Missing parentheses around King et al.
(Yang et al., 2021))
Yang and all has an extra parenthesis
Previous work in understanding the psychometric structure of conspiracy belief has relied on survey questions that are either worded in a general, non-specific fashion, or else focus on a small number (possibly singular) of events, such as those of 9/11 in the US or 7/7 in the UK [insert studies here].
Indeed studies should be inserted here
The first 15 questions on the survey were Attitude questions that assessed the respondents attitudes towards institutions.
The next 85 questions were Belief questions, assessing the respondent’s agreement with objective statements, e.g. “Humans have never landed on the moon.”
Debatable whether to capitalise Attitude and Belief. It’s probably fine.