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Échelle de confiance médiatique×Questionnaire sur la mentalité conspirationniste×
DomainePsychologie politiquePsychologie politique
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine19942013
Auteur d'origineMark D. West & Spiro KiousisRoland Imhoff & Marko Bruder
TypeSelf-reportSelf-report
Source fondatriceWest, M. D. (1994). Validating a scale for the measurement of credibility: A covariance structure modeling approach. Journalism Quarterly, 71(1), 159-168. DOI ↗Bruder, M., Haffke, P., Neave, N., Nouripanah, N., & Imhoff, R. (2013). Measuring individual differences in generic beliefs in conspiracy: Conspiracy Mentality Questionnaire. Frontiers in Psychology, 4, 225. DOI ↗
AliasMTS, Press Credibility Scale, News Media ConfidenceCMQ, Conspiracy Ideation Scale, Generic Conspiracy Belief
Apparentées33
RésuméThe Media Trust Scale measures audience confidence in news media credibility, including perceptions of accuracy, fairness, completeness, and journalists' motivations. Developed by West (1994) and extended by Kiousis (2001), the scale captures both medium-specific trust (trust in TV news vs. newspapers vs. online news) and outlet-specific trust (CNN vs. Fox News vs. BBC vs. local news). Media trust is central to understanding political polarization, misinformation vulnerability, and the functioning of the democratic public sphere, as low-trust populations reject news sources entirely, opening space for alternative information ecosystems.The Conspiracy Mentality Questionnaire measures individual differences in generic conspiracy thinking—the tendency to attribute significant events to hidden, coordinated group actions by powerful actors rather than to incompetence, chance, or transparent public causes. Developed by Bruder et al. (2013), the five-item CMQ assesses a stable dispositional trait that predicts belief in diverse conspiracy theories (JFK assassination, 9/11 truthers, anti-vaccine narratives, QAnon) and distrust of institutions. It captures conspiracy mentality as a generalised political attitude distinct from specific beliefs.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Media Trust Scale · Conspiracy Mentality Questionnaire. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare