Skip to main content
The Inquisitive Mind
select magazine
  • INT
  • DE
  • FR
  • IT
  • NL
In-Mind channels
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
Menu
search for something
  • the magazine
    • Current Issue
    • All Issues
    • Glossary
    • For Authors
    • Magazine Staff
    • Archive
  • blog
    • Blog
    • For Authors
  • book reviews
    • Book Reviews
  • videos
    • In-Mind Videos
  • the foundation
    • What is In-Mind?
    • Credits
  • donate
  • contact
  • imprint

In-Mind search

hide list read current issue

Internet, dating, addiction: A match made in heaven

written by Marina F. Thomas, Sylvia Dörfler, Gloria Mittmann & Verena Steiner-Hofbauer

Digital moral distortion: How social media can negatively shape our judgement of right and wrong

written by Tim-Dorian Knöchel & Sarah Vahed

The viral power of migrant crime messaging: Fear, emotion, and algorithms

written by Mary Ortega

Dressed for the feed: The psychology of fashion in a filtered world

written by Paola D'Elia

Covert control: How political elites and influencers use manipulation on social media

written by Meredith M. Turner & Sara Holland Levin

Scrolling against hate: Developing critical media competence to counter online antisemitism

written by Agata Maria Kraj, Özen Odağ, Larisa Buhin, Jannis Niedick, Justine Kohl, Linda P. Juang & Gudrun Dobslaw

Social media use towards self-diagnosing and health anxiety

written by Lili R. Romann

FOMO: The fun everybody else has

written by Carolin Lehmann

Viral and harmful: Violence in media and its impact on empathy

written by Mira Fauth-Bühler

6 results for „misinformation paradigm“
found in | magazine issue | 02/2012

It’s your choice! – Or is it really?

... and Olsson (2005) modified the change blindness paradigm to apply it to a decision making task. They showed participants ... Merckelbach, H., Jelicic, M., & Pieters, M. (2011a). Misinformation increases symptom reporting - a test - retest experiment. ... / more
found in | magazine issue | 01/2015

Children are poor witnesses. Or are they?

... frequently elicited experimentally using a classical misinformation paradigm originally introduced by Loftus, Miller, and Burns (1978). ... / more
found in | magazine issue | 11/2015

Can you nonbelieve it: What happens when you do not believe in your memories?

... participants with fake videos (i.e., doctored-video paradigm ; Nash, Wade, & Lindsay, 2009) to create nonbelieved memories . ... 48, 518-537 Loftus, E. F. (2005). Planting misinformation in the human mind: A 30-year investigation of the malleability ... / more
found in | magazine issue | 05/2018

Remembering what never occurred? Children’s false memories for repeated experiences

... , there are: the Deese-Roediger-McDermott word list paradigm (DRM) [ 16 ][ 17 ], misinformation paradigm [ 18 ], and implantation (lost-in-the-mall) ... / more
found in | magazine issue | 01/2020

Can We Believe in Our Own Lies?

... to study fabrication is the forced confabulation paradigm (e.g., [54] ; [55] ; [56] ). Namely, participants watch a ... [4] Loftus, E. F. (2005). Planting misinformation in the human mind: A 30-year investigation of the malleability ... / more
found in | magazine issue | 08/2025

How deliberate forgetting might lead to false memories

... use a technique called the Think/No-Think (TNT) paradigm [6] (see Figure 3) to mimic the way motivated forgetting works ... across various events and diverse age groups.  The misinformation method arises from failures in source monitoring , where ... / more

Here you can search the entire InMind magazine for any content of your choice. You can reduce your search results by selecting one or more filter options in the right column.

filter options

Article (209)
Basic page (14)
Blog Post (120)
Book Review (42)

facebook

the magazine
  • Current issue
  • All issues
  • Glossary
  • For authors
  • Magazine staff
other
  • Glossary
  • Book reviews
  • In-Mind blog
the foundation
  • What is In-Mind
  • Foundation staff
  • Credits
misc
  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Newsletter