Pages that link to "Q56339180"
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The following pages link to How Warnings about False Claims Become Recommendations (Q56339180):
Displaying 35 items.
- Why the "Death Panel" Myth Wouldn't Die: Misinformation in the Health Care Reform Debate (Q22241311) (← links)
- Going with the Grain of Cognition: Applying Insights from Psychology to Build Support for Childhood Vaccination (Q28076124) (← links)
- Does fear affect the willingness to be vaccinated? The influence of cognitive and affective aspects of risk perception during outbreaks (Q30425280) (← links)
- Aging and consumer decision making (Q34256537) (← links)
- Communicating science-based recommendations with memorable and actionable guidelines (Q34280170) (← links)
- Forewarning reduces fraud susceptibility in vulnerable consumers (Q34349315) (← links)
- Informing Public Perceptions About Climate Change: A 'Mental Models' Approach (Q36165744) (← links)
- Emotion, Affect, and Risk Communication with Older Adults: Challenges and Opportunities (Q37070819) (← links)
- Age differences in dual information-processing modes: implications for cancer decision making (Q37341853) (← links)
- The truth about the truth: a meta-analytic review of the truth effect (Q37659628) (← links)
- Misinformation and Its Correction: Continued Influence and Successful Debiasing (Q38546889) (← links)
- Changing beliefs about past public events with believable and unbelievable doctored photographs (Q38621753) (← links)
- Misinformation lingers in memory: Failure of three pro-vaccination strategies (Q38650965) (← links)
- Consumer Decision-Making of Older People: A 45-Year Review (Q38741465) (← links)
- Warnings of adverse side effects can backfire over time (Q39373136) (← links)
- Aligning Spinoza with Descartes: An informed Cartesian account of the truth bias (Q39502222) (← links)
- Myth about causes and treatment of constipation (Q43582189) (← links)
- Spinoza's error: memory for truth and falsity (Q43720490) (← links)
- Hedges enhance memory but inhibit retelling (Q46155968) (← links)
- Tricks of the Trade: Motivating Sales Agents to Con Older Adults. (Q46617763) (← links)
- Knowledge differentially supports memory for nutrition information in later life (Q46802964) (← links)
- Make It Short and Easy: Username Complexity Determines Trustworthiness Above and Beyond Objective Reputation (Q47547373) (← links)
- "To-be-forgotten" statements become less true: Memory processes involved in selection and forgetting lead to truthfulness changes of ambiguous sentences (Q48234921) (← links)
- Unveiling the truth: warnings reduce the repetition-based truth effect (Q50202673) (← links)
- Mimicry Is Presidential: Linguistic Style Matching in Presidential Debates and Improved Polling Numbers (Q50886803) (← links)
- Correcting false information in memory: manipulating the strength of misinformation encoding and its retraction (Q51018364) (← links)
- Metacognitive Experiences and the Intricacies of Setting People Straight: Implications for Debiasing and Public Information Campaigns (Q56339183) (← links)
- When Sunlight Fails to Disinfect: Understanding the Perverse Effects of Disclosing Conflicts of Interest (Q56383894) (← links)
- Ageing and Economic Decision-Making (Q56741594) (← links)
- Associations of Tabloid Newspaper Use With Endorsement of Suicide Myths, Suicide-Related Knowledge, and Stigmatizing Attitudes Toward Suicidal Individuals (Q56889693) (← links)
- Potential Paradoxical Effects of Myth-Busting as a Nutrition Education Strategy for Older Adults (Q58150247) (← links)
- Myths about HIV and AIDS among serodiscordant couples in Malawi (Q58899853) (← links)
- Less than you think: Prevalence and predictors of fake news dissemination on Facebook (Q60914894) (← links)
- Vaccine hesitancy: A vade mecum v1.0. (Q87097044) (← links)
- Using Facebook to increase coverage of HPV vaccination among Danish girls: An assessment of a Danish social media campaign (Q94501032) (← links)