Skip to main content
Kent Academic Repository

Fighting fire with fire: Prebunking with the use of a plausible meta-conspiracy framing

Biddlestone, Mikey, Green, Ricky, Toribio-Flórez, Daniel, de Gourville, Dylan, Sutton, Robbie M., Douglas, Karen M. (2025) Fighting fire with fire: Prebunking with the use of a plausible meta-conspiracy framing. British Journal of Psychology, . ISSN 0007-1269. (doi:10.1111/bjop.70023) (KAR id:111049)

PDF Publisher pdf
Language: English


Download this file
(PDF/1MB)
[thumbnail of British J of Psychology - 2025 - Biddlestone - Fighting fire with fire  Prebunking with the use of a plausible.pdf]
Preview
Request a format suitable for use with assistive technology e.g. a screenreader
PDF Author's Accepted Manuscript
Language: English

Restricted to Repository staff only
Contact us about this publication
[thumbnail of Fighting fire with fire DE-ANONYMISED.pdf]
XML Word Processing Document (DOCX) Author's Accepted Manuscript
Language: English

Restricted to Repository staff only until 31 December 2025.
Contact us about this publication
[thumbnail of Fighting fire with fire DE-ANONYMISED.docx]
Official URL:
https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.70023

Abstract

Prebunking can pre-emptively refute conspiracy narratives. We developed a new approach to prebunking—fighting fire with fire—which introduces a plausible “meta-conspiracy” suggesting that conspiracy theories are deliberately spread. In two pre-registered intervention studies, prebunking specific COVID-19 vaccine (Study 1, N = 720) and climate change (Study 2, N = 1,077) conspiracy theories (e.g., that climate change is a hoax), with or without this meta-conspiracy framing, did not reduce beliefs in these specific conspiracy theories. However, some notable findings emerged. First, both fighting fire with fire and standard prebunking (Study 2) increased belief in plausible meta-conspiracies that questioned the original specific conspiracy theories. Second, across both studies, specific conspiracy beliefs negatively predicted behavioural intentions, while belief in meta-conspiracies positively predicted them. Third, specific conspiracy beliefs were negatively related to belief in plausible meta-conspiracies in both intervention studies (cf: Pilot Study). While this approach did not reduce specific conspiracy beliefs, it increased beliefs that were negatively associated with them and positively linked to behavioural intentions. We discuss these null effects and their implications for effective prebunking among conspiracy believers.

Item Type: Article
DOI/Identification number: 10.1111/bjop.70023
Uncontrolled keywords: Prebunking, Climate change, Conspiracy beliefs, COVID-19, Misinformation
Subjects: H Social Sciences
Institutional Unit: Schools > School of Psychology
Former Institutional Unit:
There are no former institutional units.
Funders: European Council for Construction Research, Development and Innovation (https://ror.org/00d7nha28)
Depositing User: Mikey Biddlestone
Date Deposited: 25 Aug 2025 15:48 UTC
Last Modified: 17 Sep 2025 08:17 UTC
Resource URI: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/111049 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes)

University of Kent Author Information

Biddlestone, Mikey.

Creator's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1438-7392
CReDIT Contributor Roles: Writing - original draft, Visualisation, Writing - review and editing, Formal analysis, Methodology, Conceptualisation, Investigation, Validation, Data curation, Software

Green, Ricky.

Creator's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7634-3024
CReDIT Contributor Roles: Investigation, Conceptualisation, Writing - review and editing

Toribio-Flórez, Daniel.

Creator's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9706-709X
CReDIT Contributor Roles: Writing - review and editing

de Gourville, Dylan.

Creator's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9848-8101
CReDIT Contributor Roles: Writing - review and editing

Sutton, Robbie M..

Creator's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1542-1716
CReDIT Contributor Roles: Writing - review and editing, Conceptualisation, Methodology, Supervision

Douglas, Karen M..

Creator's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0381-6924
CReDIT Contributor Roles: Methodology, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Conceptualisation, Writing - review and editing
  • Depositors only (login required):

Total unique views of this page since July 2020. For more details click on the image.