Caltech Center for Science, Society, and Public Policy (CSSPP) Workshop
The Caltech Center for Science, Society, and Public Policy and the O'Doherty Lab in the Division of the Humanities and Social Sciences at Caltech are hosting a two-day workshop on "Conspiratorial Thinking & Origins, Spread, and Consequences," on September 14-15, 2023 at Caltech. There will be presentations about current research, from social and decision neurosciences, about the measurement of conspiratorial thinking, the origins of conspiratorial beliefs, how conspiratorial thinking spreads, and the consequences of belief in conspiracy theory for public opinion, trust in science, and public policy.
September 14, 2023
9:00 – 9:15am: Opening remarks
9:15 – 10:45am: History and Philosophy of Conspiracy Beliefs
"Blood Libel: The Template for the Modern Conspiracy Theory," Elise Wang (CSU, Fullerton)
"Betting on Conspiracy: A Decision Theoretic Account of the Rationality of Conspiracy Theory Belief," Melina Tsapos (Lund University)
10:45am – 12:15pm: Current Events: Climate Change and Conspiracy Beliefs
"Conspiracy Beliefs, Climate and Environmental Attitudes, and Sustainable Behavior," Yimeng Li et al. (Florida State University)
"Conspiracy Spillovers are Shaping Public Attitudes Towards Climate Technologies," Ramit Debnath (University of Cambridge)
12:15 – 1:45pm: Lunch
2:00 – 4:15pm: Current Events: Conspiracy Beliefs, Partisanship, and Political Rumors
"The Root of False Beliefs: Political Rumors in America from 2010 to the Present," Adam Berinsky (MIT)
"Partisan Linked Fate in the American Mass Public," Betsy Sinclair (Washington University in St. Louis) and Steven W. Webster (Indiana University)
"Not Seeing is Believing: Santa Claus and Secret Plots," Joanne Miller (University of Delaware)
4:15 – 4:30pm: Closing remarks and outlook to Day 2
September 15, 2023
10:00am – 12:15pm: Cognitive/Computational Aspects of Conspiracy Beliefs
"Do Conspiracy Theorists Think Too Much or Too Little?" Nadia Brashier (UC San Diego)
"Overconfidently Conspiratorial: Conspiracy Believers are Dispositionally Overconfident and Massively Overestimate How Much Others Agree with Them," Gordon Pennycook (Cornell University)
"A Comprehensive Approach to Identify the Cognitive Attributes Underpinning Susceptibility to Conspiracy Beliefs," Lisa Kluen et al. (Caltech)
12:15 – 1:45pm: Lunch
2:00 – 4:15pm: Psychiatric Aspects of Conspiracy Beliefs
"Paranoia and Conspiracy Theories Relate to Unexpected Uncertainty in Belief Updating and Assumptions about Others," Phil Corlett (Yale University)
"Differentiating Paranoia and Conspiracy Mentality – A Network Approach," Saskia Denecke et al. (University of Hamburg)
"Conspiracy Theory Beliefs: A Sane Response to an Insane World?" Joseph Pierre (UC San Francisco)
4:15 – 5:00pm: Psychological Interventions
"Psychological Inoculation Against Conspiracy Theories," Sander van der Linden (University of Cambridge)
5:00 – 5:15pm: Closing remarks
Open to the academic/research community only.
Click here to register: https://forms.gle/FUSdpF514yNAm9RA8