Tearing apart the “evil” twins: A general conspiracy mentality is not the same as specific conspiracy beliefs R Imhoff, T Bertlich, M Frenken Current Opinion in Psychology 46, 101349, 2022 | 153 | 2022 |
A uniform conspiracy mindset or differentiated reactions to specific conspiracy beliefs? Evidence from latent profile analyses M Frenken, R Imhoff International Review of Social Psychology 34 (1), 1-15, 2021 | 54 | 2021 |
On the relation between religiosity and the endorsement of conspiracy theories: The role of political orientation M Frenken, M Bilewicz, R Imhoff Political Psychology 44 (1), 139-156, 2023 | 52 | 2023 |
Don't trust anybody: Conspiracy mentality and the detection of facial trustworthiness cues M Frenken, R Imhoff Applied Cognitive Psychology 37 (2), 256-265, 2023 | 31 | 2023 |
Malevolent intentions and secret coordination. Dissecting cognitive processes in conspiracy beliefs via diffusion modeling M Frenken, R Imhoff Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 103, 104383, 2022 | 21 | 2022 |
Exploring the switching of the focus of attention within working memory: A combined event-related potential and behavioral study M Frenken, S Berti International Journal of Psychophysiology 126, 30-41, 2018 | 11 | 2018 |
“Just Because It’sa Conspiracy Theory Doesn’t Mean They’re Not Out to Get You”: Differentiating the Correlates of Judgments of Plausible Versus Implausible Conspiracy Theories M Frenken, A Reusch, R Imhoff Social Psychological and Personality Science, 19485506241240506, 2024 | 10 | 2024 |
Cognitive processes behind the shooter bias: Dissecting response bias, motor preparation and information accumulation M Frenken, W Hemmerich, D Izydorczyk, S Scharf, R Imhoff Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 98, 104230, 2022 | 6 | 2022 |