$24.95
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Hardcover
291 pages
ISBN 9781583333259 Published Sept. 2008
Avery Publishing Group
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Psychologist DiFonzo has studied hearsay for more than 15 years, and in this book he argues that rumors--and the tendency to believe them without question--stem from people's deeply rooted motivation to make sense of the world.
From the Publisher:
A deeply revealing look at why we spread rumors, why we believe them, and how they affect our behavior.
During the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, rumors were flying about stranded residents shooting rescue workers. In New York City, the Brooklyn Bottling Groupas business was devastated by false rumors that its soda contained sterilizers.
Psychologist Nicholas DiFonzo has studied hearsay for more than fifteen years, and in this book he shows that the process that gave rise to these troubling rumors is fundamentally the same as a tete-a-tete around the company watercooler.
Why are rumors a ubiquitous aspect of the human experiencea whether theyare about plots to wipe out the urban poor through sterilizers or a companyas plan to downsize? Armed with entertaining examples from all spheres of life, DiFonzo asserts that rumors are a window into both individual and group psychology.
DiFonzo ultimately argues that rumors stem from our deeply rooted motivation to make sense of the world. As social beings, when confronted with an ambiguous or threatening situation, our response is to talk to one anotherawhether at the dinner table, on the Web, or around the watercooler.
Tagged: Rumor, Social psychology
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