Symptom Self-Reports Are Susceptible to Misinformation

DOI

We examined whether self-reported symptoms are affected by explicit and implicit misinformation. In Experiment 1, undergraduates (N = 60) rated how often they experienced common somatic and psychological symptoms. During a subsequent interview, they were exposed to misinformation about two of their ratings: one was inflated (upgraded misinformation), while another was deflated (downgraded misinformation). Close to 82% of the participants accepted the upward symptom misinformation, while 67% accepted the downward manipulation. Also, 27% confabulated reasons for upgraded symptom ratings, while 8% confabulated reasons for downgraded ratings. At a follow-up test, some days later, participants (n = 55) tended to escalate their symptom ratings in accordance with the upgraded misinformation. Such internalization was less clear for downgraded misinformation. There was no statistically significant relation between dissociativity and acceptance or internalization of symptom misinformation. In Experiment 2, a more subtle and implicit form of misinformation was employed. Undergraduates (N = 50) completed a checklist of common symptoms and were provided with feedback for some symptoms (targets) misleadingly suggesting that a slight majority of their peers experienced these targets on a regular basis. Next, participants rated the checklist again. Overall, symptom ratings went down for control but not for targets symptoms. Participants with escalated symptom ratings for targets had higher dissociativity scores than those who did not exhibit escalation. Taken together, our results suggest that upward symptom manipulations affect symptom self-reports more than downward manipulations and that dissociativity may play a role in symptom escalation when misinformation is subtle.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34894/ECOV4Q
Metadata Access https://dataverse.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34894/ECOV4Q
Provenance
Creator Merckelbach, Harald ORCID logo; Dalsklev, Madeleine; Helvoort, Daniël van; Boskovic, Irena ORCID logo; Otgaar, Henry
Publisher DataverseNL
Contributor Merckelbach, Harald; faculty data manager FPN
Publication Year 2017
Rights CC0 Waiver; info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess; https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
OpenAccess false
Contact Merckelbach, Harald (Maastricht University); faculty data manager FPN (Maastricht University)
Representation
Resource Type survey data; Dataset
Format application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document; application/x-spss-sav
Size 49487; 17636; 52330; 83729; 104241
Version 1.1
Discipline Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture; Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture and Veterinary Medicine; Life Sciences; Social Sciences; Social and Behavioural Sciences; Soil Sciences