Journal of Individual Differences, volume 45, issue 3, pages 185-200

Isolated But Not Necessarily Lonely

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-07-01
scimago Q3
wos Q4
SJR0.424
CiteScore2.7
Impact factor1.2
ISSN16140001, 21512299
Biological Psychiatry
General Psychology
Abstract

Abstract: Previous research points to social/affiliative needs as playing an important role in orienting people towards conspiratorial thinking. Yet no research to date has compared the relative contribution of different forms of subjective interpersonal isolation to general conspiracist ideation (CI). Four studies ( N = 2,452) compare the associations between three forms of subjective isolation (loneliness, existential isolation, alienation/anomie) and CI. Results from Studies 1–3 indicate that existential isolation and alienation, but not loneliness, independently predict higher CI over and above other relevant predictors. Study 4 found that after controlling for relevant covariates, only anomie predicted CI. Exploratory analyses revealed that unique effects of existential isolation on CI emerged when the breakdown of the leadership subdimension of anomie was excluded from the model. Implications of the four studies are discussed.

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