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Reason: None provided.

From Searching for the cognitive basis of anti-vaccination attitudes:

"Although most earlier studies have included fewer predictor variables, the same cognitive factors that were here associated with vaccine skepticism have predicted belief in fake news (Bronstein et al., 2019), belief in alternative medicine (Galbraith et al., 2018), skepticism about genetic modification (Rutjens et al., 2018) and climate change (Trémolière & Djeriouat, 2021), paranormal and conspiracy beliefs (Rizeq et al., 2021), creationism (Sinatra et al., 2003), the tendency to rate meaningless statements as profound (Pennycook et al., 2015a), and a general tendency to endorse pseudoscientific and other unwarranted beliefs (Čavojová et al., 2020; Fasce & Picó, 2019; Piejka & Okruszek, 2020)."

From the brain trust at omegancanada.win: "Ah baloney!"

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

From Searching for the cognitive basis of anti-vaccination attitudes:

"Although most earlier studies have included fewer predictor variables, the same cognitive factors that were here associated with vaccine skepticism have predicted belief in fake news (Bronstein et al., 2019), belief in alternative medicine (Galbraith et al., 2018), skepticism about genetic modification (Rutjens et al., 2018) and climate change (Trémolière & Djeriouat, 2021), paranormal and conspiracy beliefs (Rizeq et al., 2021, creationism (Sinatra et al., 2003), the tendency to rate meaningless statements as profound (Pennycook et al., 2015a), and a general tendency to endorse pseudoscientific and other unwarranted beliefs (Čavojová et al., 2020; Fasce & Picó, 2019; Piejka & Okruszek, 2020)."

From the brain trust at omegancanada.win: "Ah baloney!"

1 year ago
1 score