Why do people believe COVID-19 conspiracy theories? JE Uscinski, AM Enders, CA Klofstad, MI Seelig, R Funchion, John, ... The Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) Misinformation Review, 2020 | 551 | 2020 |
The relationship between social media use and beliefs in conspiracy theories and misinformation AM Enders, JE Uscinski, MI Seelig, CA Klofstad, S Wuchty, JR Funchion, ... Political behavior, 1-24, 2021 | 268 | 2021 |
The different forms of COVID-19 misinformation and their consequences AM Enders, JE Uscinski, C Klofstad, J Stoler The Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) Misinformation Review, 2020 | 232 | 2020 |
Conspiracy theories: A primer JE Uscinski, AM Enders Rowman & Littlefield, 2023 | 177 | 2023 |
The differential effects of actual and perceived polarization AM Enders, MT Armaly Political Behavior 41, 815-839, 2019 | 166 | 2019 |
American politics in two dimensions: Partisan and ideological identities versus anti‐establishment orientations JE Uscinski, AM Enders, MI Seelig, CA Klofstad, JR Funchion, C Everett, ... American Journal of Political Science 65 (4), 877-895, 2021 | 149 | 2021 |
Christian nationalism and political violence: Victimhood, racial identity, conspiracy, and support for the capitol attacks MT Armaly, DT Buckley, AM Enders Political behavior 44 (2), 937-960, 2022 | 132 | 2022 |
Have beliefs in conspiracy theories increased over time? J Uscinski, A Enders, C Klofstad, M Seelig, H Drochon, K Premaratne, ... PLoS One 17 (7), e0270429, 2022 | 124 | 2022 |
The partisan contours of conspiracy theory beliefs SM Smallpage, AM Enders, JE Uscinski Research & politics 4 (4), 2053168017746554, 2017 | 106 | 2017 |
Are republicans and conservatives more likely to believe conspiracy theories? A Enders, C Farhart, J Miller, J Uscinski, K Saunders, H Drochon Political Behavior 45 (4), 2001-2024, 2023 | 96 | 2023 |
Informational cues, partisan-motivated reasoning, and the manipulation of conspiracy beliefs AM Enders, SM Smallpage Political Communication 36 (1), 83-102, 2019 | 94 | 2019 |
The increasing racialization of American electoral politics, 1988-2016 AM Enders, JS Scott American Politics Research 47 (2), 275-303, 2019 | 87 | 2019 |
Do conspiracy beliefs form a belief system? Examining the structure and organization of conspiracy beliefs AM Enders, JE Uscinski, CA Klofstad, MI Seelig, S Wuchty, MN Murthi, ... Journal of Social and Political Psychology 9 (1), 255-271, 2021 | 83 | 2021 |
Are all ‘birthers’ conspiracy theorists? On the relationship between conspiratorial thinking and political orientations AM Enders, SM Smallpage, RN Lupton British Journal of Political Science 50 (3), 849-866, 2020 | 81 | 2020 |
Values and political predispositions in the age of polarization: Examining the relationship between partisanship and ideology in the United States, 1988–2012 RN Lupton, SM Smallpage, AM Enders British Journal of Political Science 50 (1), 241-260, 2020 | 72 | 2020 |
Are misinformation, antiscientific claims, and conspiracy theories for political extremists? AM Enders, JE Uscinski Group Processes & Intergroup Relations 24 (4), 583-605, 2021 | 65 | 2021 |
Who supports QAnon? A case study in political extremism AM Enders, JE Uscinski, CA Klofstad, S Wuchty, MI Seelig, JR Funchion, ... The Journal of Politics 84 (3), 1844-1849, 2022 | 62 | 2022 |
Polls, Plots, and Party Politics: Conspiracy Theories in Contemporary America AM Enders, SM Smallpage Conspiracy Theories and the People Who Believe Them, 2018 | 58 | 2018 |
‘Why me?’The role of perceived victimhood in American politics MT Armaly, AM Enders Political Behavior, 1-27, 2021 | 55 | 2021 |
The 2020 presidential election and beliefs about fraud: Continuity or change? AM Enders, JE Uscinski, CA Klofstad, K Premaratne, MI Seelig, S Wuchty, ... Electoral studies 72, 102366, 2021 | 53 | 2021 |