Publications
Joyner, L., Buchanan, T., & Yetkili, O. (2023). Moral leniency towards belief-consistent disinformation may help explain its spread on social media. Plos one, 18(3), e0281777.
Perach, R., Joyner, L., Husbands, D., & Buchanan, T. (2023). Why Do People Share Political Information and Misinformation Online? Developing a Bottom-Up Descriptive Framework. Social Media + Society, 9(3), 20563051231192032.
Kaye, L. K., Rousaki, A., Joyner, L. C., Barrett, L. A., & Orchard, L. J. (2022). The Online Behaviour Taxonomy: A conceptual framework to understand behaviour in computer-mediated communication. Computers in Human Behavior, 107443.
Selected Conference Presentations
Political orientation may influence moral judgements of disinformation, but only when people know it is untrue. BPS Cyberpsychology Conference, Northumbria, U.K. (July 2023)
Tendency to prioritise “fairness” within certain contexts may help explain political asymmetries in misinformation spread. Psychology Research Forum. University of Westminster (June 2023)
Political ideology may help explain group-differences in moral evaluations of disinformation. Political Psychology Conference. University of Westminster (October 2022)
Flexible moral judgements and the spread of belief-consistent disinformation on social media. BPS Cyberpsychology Conference, Brighton, U.K. (September 2022)
Making exceptions for belief consistent content: Moral psychology & spreading disinformation online. BPS Social Psychology Conference. London, U.K. (September 2022)
Group identity and event-related beliefs influence potential sharing and moral judgements of disinformation. Psychology Postgraduate Affairs Group (PsyPAG) Conference (August 2021)
Issue-related beliefs influence moral judgements and potential sharing of disinformation on social media. Disinformation, Language, and Identity Workshop. Cardiff University (April 2021)