To stem the tide of hostility on social media, real-world policy solutions are needed to address social frustrations in the United States.
By
Professor of Political Science
Abstract
Why are some people motivated to circulate hostile political information? While prior studies have focused on partisan motivations, we demonstrate that some individuals circulate hostile rumors because they wish to unleash chaos to “burn down” the entire political order in the hope they gain status in the process. To understand this psychology, we theorize and measure a novel psychological state, the Need for Chaos, emerging in an interplay of social marginalization and status-oriented personalities. Across eight studies of individuals living in the United States, we show that this need is a strong predictor of motivations to share hostile political rumors, even after accounting for partisan motivations, and can help illuminate differences and commonalities in the frustrations of both historically privileged and marginalized groups. To stem the tide of hostility on social media, the present findings suggest that real-world policy solutions are needed to address social frustrations in the United States.
Introduction
Social media provide citizens with power to craft and share news with each other. Unfortunately, this technological transformation has made it easier than before to spread what we callhostile political rumorsin a way that goes “farther, faster, deeper, and more broadly than truth” (Vosoughi, Roy, and Aral 2018, 1147). Hostile political rumors portray politicians and political groups negatively and possess low evidential value. They encapsulate conspiracy theories, “fake news,” discussions of political scandals, and negative campaigns. Although these different types of news vary in substance and form, they all seek to incite hostility toward a specific target and are difficult to verify or disprove. Hostile political rumors can shape political outcomes in considerable ways, from sparking significant small-scale incidents—such as protests (Tucker et al. 2017) and cyberbullying of political opponents (Buckels, Trapnell, and PaulhusReference Buckels, Trapnell and Paulhus2014)—to influencing large-scale political outcomes (e.g., Allcott and Gentzkow 2017).
Extant research focuses on how partisan animus affects the likelihood of believing and sharing hostile news (Allcott and Gentzkow 2017; Miller, Saunders, and Farhart 016; Osmundsen et al. 2021; Van Bavel and Pereira 2018). Nonetheless, political cleavages do not solely reflect differing allegiances to political parties. They also reflect the degree to which individuals feel disenfranchised by the entire political system (Uscinski et al. 2021). In this article, we provide a detailed examination of how anti-systemic sentiments motivate the willingness to share and believe in hostile political rumors.
We outline a theoretical framework about an overlooked psychological strategy for acquiring social status—the incitement of chaos—and demonstrate the relevance of this strategy for contemporary politics. We build on research showing that status-oriented personality traits combined with social rejection can push people toward an escalation of aggressive motivations (Krizan and Johar r2015; Twenge and Campbell 2003). We argue that such motivations, when sufficiently strong, take root as a general destructive mindset. Next, we develop and validate the novel Need for Chaos scale to measure this mindset. Across eight well-powered studies (including representative studies of the U.S. population), we find evidence that the Need for Chaos emerges in an interplay between status-oriented personality traits and social contexts of real and perceived marginalization and is a strong predictor of willingness to share hostile political rumors, over and beyond partisanship. Overall, our findings imply that a challenge facing modern society is the existence of marginalized status-seekers who wish to incite chaos by spreading hostile rumors.
Hostile Rumors and Contexts of Conflict
Sharing hostile political rumors serves social goals beyond promoting the perceived truth, and is often linked to situations of social conflict (Horowitz 2001; Petersen, Osmundsen, and Tooby 2021). In a comprehensive review of the factors involved in the onset of ethnic riots, Horowitz (Horowitz 2001, 74) contends that hostile rumors are more effective than accurate information at mobilizing violence, concluding, “Rumor prevails because it orders and organizes action-in-process.”
The functions of hostile rumor sharing in the context of social conflict are manifold. The act of sharing signals the sharer’s commitment to aggression, potentially creating mobilization cascades among others with similar preferences (Petersen, Osmundsen, and Tooby 2021); the content of hostile rumors may persuade neutral audiences to turn against the outgroup (Horowitz 2001); and flooding informational ecosystems with false, hostile information can sow distraction and confusion among outgroup members as they spend energy on countering the misinformation (Heath 2021). Finally, sharing offensive information may signal to others that the sharer has an aggressive and dominant personality (De Araujo et al. 2021).
Helping Your Party or Destroying the System?
Partisanship offers a common explanation for why people share hostile political rumors in the contemporary United States (Allcott and Gentzkow 2017; Van Bavel and Pereira 2018). Deepening political conflict has caused partisans in the United States and beyond to develop hostile feelings across party lines (Iyengar et al. 2019), making it plausible that deeply committed partisans will strategically share hostile political rumors to target members of the opposing party and mobilize co-partisans. Consistent with this, studies find that partisanship predicts political conspiracy beliefs about the out-party (Miller, Saunders, and Farhart 2016) as well as belief in and sharing of political “fake news” (Allcott and Gentzkow 2017; Osmundsen et al. 2021; Van Bavel and Pereira 2018).
Yet, motivations to share hostile political rumors may also reflect dissatisfaction with the entire political system, including all its traditional actors. In fact, alongside growing partisan polarization, democracies have experienced rising levels of income inequality and stagnation in real wages (Turchin 2016). As social well-being has worsened, some citizens increasingly express feelings of “losing out” and discontent with the political establishment (Kriesi and Schulte-Cloos 2020). These feelings of status loss and marginalization, even if imagined rather than real, have shaped recent political events, including the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States (Mutz 2018) and the rise of populism in Europe (Kriesi and Schulte-Cloos 2020). Frustrations about status loss have been observed among members of traditionally privileged groups (e.g., white men), but actual experiences of historical injustices by members of marginalized groups can also trigger deep dissatisfaction with the political system (e.g., among Black individuals; Kimmel 2017; Mutz 2018).
Prior research suggests that experiences of marginalization activate disruptive views and behaviors. For example, indicators of marginalization, such as lack of trust, predict conspiratorial beliefs beyond the effects of partisanship (Miller, Saunders, and Farhart 2016). Psychological research also shows that uncertainty about one’s own social standing predicts identification with radicalized groups (Hogg, Kruglanski, and van den Bos 2013) and support for political violence (Gøtzsche-Astrup 2019).
Individuals who are motivated by partisan animus to share hostile political rumors tend to share only those that strategically help their “own” party by denigrating the opposing party (Osmundsen et al. 2021). In contrast, individuals’ discontent with the entire political system should motivate sharing of hostile political rumors that they believe could damage the system itself. As a result, these individuals should share hostile political rumors, irrespective of which party it helps or hurts.
A Theoretical Model: The Dual Role of Status Orientations and Social Marginalization
We hypothesize that some individuals are so disaffected with current society and their (perceived) status in it that they indiscriminately share hostile political rumors as a way to disrupt the established democratic “cosmos” and start anew.
Prior research has made considerable progress in understanding nonmainstream but legitimate forms of political activism such as voting for populist or radical right-wing parties and how this is fueled by feelings of marginalization in the face of globalization, unemployment, and immigration (Kriesi and Schulte-Cloos 2020). Nonetheless, the current spread of hostile political rumors is linked to events that go far beyond legitimate activism, such as the violent protests against state interventions during the corona pandemic (Bartusevičius et al. 2021) or the insurrection against the U.S. Congress in January 2021.
In order to understand the psychological motivations of these individuals, we must consider the interaction of personality dispositions and situational triggers (Crocker et al. 1987). Recent work on radicalization shows that feelings of marginalization, even if extreme, mostly lead to radicalization for individuals with “dark” personalities (Gøtzsche-Astrup 2019).
Individual differences in the importance attributed to social status are particularly important for understanding aggression. Individuals who feel entitled to have a high social status are more prone to engage in antisocial behavior, such as participation in violent events (Bartusevičius, van Leeuwen, and Petersen 2020) and online bullying (Bor and Petersen 2022; Buckels, Trapnell, and Paulhus 2014). More specifically, psychological research differentiates between prestige and dominance as differential routes to status (Cheng et al. 2013) and suggests that dominance orientations are particularly likely to engender feelings of entitlement that motivate aggression. Prestige entails earning status in exchange for competence. Dominance entails achieving status via “the induction of fear, through intimidation and coercion,” which in turn motivates aggressive behavior (Bartusevičius, van Leeuwen, and Petersen 2020), including in the online domain (Bor and Petersen 2022). Individuals who are disposed to use dominance to sustain their perceived entitlements to status may therefore be particularly likely to react aggressively in the face of challenges to their status.
While the relationship between dominance and antisocial behavior in politics is well established, we know significantly less about the dynamics between such traits and motivations todisruptestablished hierarchies, especially in politics. In fact, dominance-oriented individuals oftensupportexisting social hierarchies (Ho et al. 2015).
A fuller understanding of the relationship between dominance motivations and discontent requires us to take situational triggers into account—particularly, feelings of marginalization as highlighted in prior research on populism (Kriesi and Schulte-Cloos 2020). A key driver of some people’s discontent with the political system is discrepancy between their perceived social standing and the social standing to which they feel entitled (Crocker et al. 1987). Dominance-oriented individuals feel greater entitlement and greater motivation to obtain a superior position within the hierarchy. Marginalization should therefore activate greater feelings of dissatisfaction with the current system among those who are oriented toward dominance-based status.
Marginalization exists in many forms, and some may trigger status-oriented individuals more strongly to share hostile political rumors. First, a consistent finding in psychology is that losing a resource looms larger than failing to gain a resource of a similar size (Tversky and Kahneman 1991). This has also been found to be the case in relation to social status (Osmundsen and PetersenReference Osmundsen and Petersen2020) and, accordingly, the loss of a privileged position may be particularly likely to generate strong anti-systemic sentiments. This is consistent with research suggesting that feelings of “aggrieved entitlement” are particularly disruptive and found among historically privileged groups such as white men (Kimmel 2017).
Second, marginalization can be personal, but it can also be felt with reference to one’s social group. Feelings of insecurity about one’s personal social status have consistently been found to propel people toward extremism (Hogg, Kruglanski, and van den Bos 2013). At the group level, however, prior research suggests that extremism is often related toinflatedappraisals of one’s ingroup (e.g., in the form of collective narcissism) rather than feelings of inferiority (Golec de Zavala and Lantos 2020). In fact, such inflated group appraisals often reflect personal marginalization. In their review of the literature on collective narcissism, (Golec de Zavala and Lantos 2020, 276) thus argue that “the in-group’s image is used as a vehicle to satisfy frustrated self-importance and to protect the undermined self-esteem.” Overall, these lines of research converge on the prediction that personal status losses may trigger particularly disruptive responses.
Destruction as a Dominance Strategy: The Need for Chaos
Dominance strategies have mostly been analyzed as ways to protect the status of individuals in high-status groups (Cheng et al. 2013). In contrast, we are interested in understanding how dominance strategies are adopted by individuals who perceive themselves to be at the periphery of society. We hypothesize that when coupled with feelings of marginalization, dominance-oriented strategies may flip from using targeted aggression toward specific individuals to indiscriminate tactics that sow chaos as a means to disrupt the system and advance up the social hierarchy.
Extant research offers some empirical support for our thesis that marginalization and status loss can motivate some individuals to sow chaos through indiscriminate aggression. For example, the cross-cultural phenomenon of “running amok” emerges in the face of severe status loss (Hempel et al. 2000). Similarly, in Western societies, shooting rampages are sometimes a response to chronic feelings of marginalization among individuals with antisocial dispositions (Twenge and Campbell 2003). In the words of one of the shooters from the Columbine school massacre, “The lonely man strikes with absolute rage!” (Krizan and Johar 2015, 797). At the less extreme end, psychological studies of exclusion and aggression show that the combination of situational exclusion and dispositional sensitivity to rejection can lead to aggressiveness, even against innocent bystanders (DeWall, Enjaian, and Bell 2016). Similarly, reviews on the frustration–aggression hypothesis find that displaced aggression is a reliable phenomenon (Marcus-Newhall et al. 2000) and that it emerges in individuals with antisocial personalities when they face the continuous presence of multiple small provocations (Miller et al. 2003; Twenge and Campbell 2003).
While generalized destructive tendencies, such as displaced aggression, are often interpreted as maladaptive (Miller et al. 2003), there may be functional benefits to displays of destructive intent for marginalized individuals. First, displays of destructive tendencies may serve as hard-to-fake signals of the motivation to impose costs and, hence, operate as a general deterrence device (Fessler et al. 2014). Second, if individuals react with severe aggression to rejection, others may be pressured to invest in burnishing the person’s sense of self as a way to reduce the person’s ire. For example, among vulnerable narcissists, minor rejections may trigger “narcissistic rage” involving disproportionate aggression with the goal of avoiding further rejection (Krizan and Johar 2015). Finally, as a dominance strategy, marginalized individuals may see destruction as a form of “niche construction” in which they cultivate a social ecology where they are more likely to be successful. Antisocial individuals are better at navigating social conflict than others (Sell, Tooby, and Cosmides 2009). If they can stir up conflict, they create a context in which they have an advantage.
Our aim is to measure the destructive mindset that emerges from the combination of dominance dispositions and social marginalization. We call this mindset theNeed for Chaosand define it as a desire for a new beginning through the destruction of order and established structures. We chose the term “chaos” to reflect both the modern meaning of disorder and the original Greek meaning where it refers to a state from which order is produced. Need for Chaos is thus a mindset to gain status by disrupting the established order. We use the term “need” in the same way as it is used in studies of other psychological individual differences—that is, as something that “…directs behavior towards a goal and cause tension when this goal is not attained” (Cacioppo and Petty 1982, 117). It is not a biological need in the sense of thirst or hunger. Rather, the underlying evolutionary problem that the desire for chaos expresses relates to status maintenance and acquisition. Furthermore, the Need for Chaos is not a stable personality trait, but is expected to emerge in the interplay of environments related to personal status loss and traits related to dominance. It is thus a “characteristic adaptation” (McAdams and Pals 2006, 208–9) that matches behavioral tendencies in dispositions to a specific context.
We contend that individuals who are high in Need for Chaos share hostile rumors as a way to destabilize the established political system. As discussed above, these individuals may believe that sharing hostile rumors mobilizes like-minded others and creates confusion among those with the status they seek. In addition, the normative transgressions involved in the sharing of offensive and outrageous information may in itself be seen as attempts to assert the dominance that people high in Need for Chaos so strongly crave.
Overview of Research Questions and Studies
Empirically, we address the two key research questions outlined above: First, to what extent do extreme anti-systemic sentiments encapsulated in a Need for Chaos predict the sharing of hostile political rumors over and beyond partisan motivations? Second, does the Need for Chaos emerge through the combination of dominance-oriented dispositions and marginalization? We address these research questions through six empirical tests. The empirical basis is eight survey studies (combinedN=10,921) conducted in the United States in the period of February 2018 to February 2022.Table 1provides an overview of the surveys, andSectionS1of the Supplementary Material (SM) details the sample characteristics and procedures.
The first three empirical tests focus on the Need for Chaos as an alternative motivation for hostile rumor sharing over and beyond partisan animosity. Test 1 develops and validates a one-dimensional measure of chaotic sentiments to tear down the political system—the Need for Chaos. Test 2 marshals data from six studies to demonstrate the relevance of the Need for Chaos for understanding the spread of hostile rumors about political elites affiliated with the Democratic and Republican Party. We show that while party identifiers favor rumors targeting political opponents, individuals with high levels of Need for Chaos (“chaos-seekers”) are motivated to indiscriminately share hostile rumors targeting elites from both parties. These analyses also reveal that chaos-seekers share hostile rumors about both Democrats and Republicans, even if they report to identify with one of these parties.
Test 3 examines why a Need for Chaos motivates indiscriminate sharing of rumors, even against political elites with whom they share a partisan identity. Test 3 shows that chaos-seekers view hostile rumor sharing as a tool for mobilizing against all political elites they consider corrupt, whether from the in-party or the out-party. This is motivated by deeply negative views of voters and elites from both parties, including from their party, reflecting in part a feeling of “abandonment” by their own party.
The role of feelings of abandonment provides a bridge to our second research question on the causes of a Need for Chaos. In Test 4, we ask: Who needs chaos? In this test, we demonstrate that the Need for Chaos is pronounced among individuals with a combination of Status-Driven Risk-Taking, a key measure of dominance orientations (Ashton et al. 2010), and feelings of marginalization.
In Test 5, we provide additional evidence on the type marginalization most likely to trigger a Need for Chaos. Specifically, we examine the association between Need for Chaos and perceptions of status gains and status losses at the level of groups and individuals, respectively. We find that a Need for Chaos is most strongly associated with perceptions of personal status losses.
In the final test, Test 6, we use these insights to shed light on the politics of contemporary American society and how a Need for Chaos is distributed across indicators of historically marginalized groups based on gender and race. We find that Need for Chaos is highest among racial groups facing historical injustice—in particular, Black males—reflecting their higher concerns about their societal standing. At the same time, consistent with notions of aggrieved entitlement among members of historically privileged groups, we show that white men react more aggressively than any other group to perceived status challenges. While white men do not feel highly status-challenged on average, they are more likely to seek chaos when they do. Test 6 thus shows that a desire to “burn it all down” may emerge from multiple pathways shaped by current societal cleavages, yet for different reasons.
Figure 1presents an overview of the proposed theoretical model and how the empirical assessments of the individual parts of the model are distributed across tests.
All studies were conducted in accordance with the Code of Conduct for Research Integrity of the primary investigator’s university and associated policies of the National Committee for Health Research Ethics. Studies were conducted online and involved voluntary and informed consent with the possibility of ending participation at any time. In Section S1 of the SM, we outline participant compensation. For studies conducted via a survey company, consent for participation and data processing was obtained by the company on the author’s behalf. For studies conducted via a crowd-sourcing platform, we obtained consent for participation and data processing ourselves. Given the potential sensitive nature of the topic of hostile political rumors, no studies in the main text used deception. Data and codes to reproduce all results are available on Dataverse (Petersen, Osmundsen, and Arceneaux 2023).
Test 1: Developing the Need or Chaos Scale
Overview
The aim of Test 1 is to develop the Need for Chaos scale. To establish the scale, we use survey data from a socially diverse sample of 1,004 American adults (“Study 1” ofTable 1). The survey fielded an initial pool of 11 items intended to reflect the central features of the Need for Chaos scale: a desire for upending social institutions, tearing down established political hierarchies, and rebuilding society from scratch. Participants were asked on seven-point scales whether they disagreed or agreed with each item. We then conducted an exploratory factor analysis to identify the latent construct(s) underlying this battery of measured items, anticipating that the items mapped onto a one-dimensional construct of chaotic motivations. The details of the analysis are presented in Section S2 of the SM.
Results
Table 2presents the final items used to measure the Need for Chaos (NFCChaosfor short). Based on item clarity, item loadings, and cross-loadings from an exploratory factor analysis, we retained seven of the items that most comprehensively described the one-dimensional structure of the data (i.e., items in bold font inTable 2). This one-dimensional solution produced an eigenvalue of 4.53 and explained 65% of the shared variance (see Table S3 in the SM). AsTable 2shows, the items making up NFCChaostap disruptive political sentiments—for example, “When I think about our political and social institutions, I cannot help thinking ‘just let them all burn’”—as well as general tendencies toward destruction—for example, “Sometimes I just feel like destroying beautiful things.” The final scale displayed high reliability (α=0.90).
The Need for Chaos captures motivations to tear down society’s political order, but how commonplace are such sentiments?Figure 2shows the distribution of NFCChaos, scaled to range from 0 to 1, in the socially diverse Study 1. The measure skews toward the low end of the distribution, with a mean value of 0.17 and a standard deviation of 0.22. In other words, most participants accept the current political system. Nonetheless, a nontrivial minority of participants place themselves toward the scale’s higher end, expressing “some” to “strong” agreement with many of the statements. The skewed nature of the distribution of the Need for Chaos presents analytical challenges (e.g., outliers), which we deal with in subsequent tests.
All items of NFCChaosare worded such that agreement reflects strong disruptive motivations. This question format may induce acquiescence bias in which some participants tend to agree with statements irrespective of content. Study 2 therefore developed a revised measure of the Need for Chaos (NFCChaos-R) that includes two reverse-coded items on the top of the original items (presented in italics inTable 2and used in Studies 2, 7, and 8). Section S2 of the SM describes the construction of NFCChaos-R, whereas the right-hand panel ofFigure 2plots its distribution. Reassuringly, the distributions of the two versions are very similar.
Supporting the distinct contribution of the Need for Chaos measure, analyses presented in Section S2 of the SM (6–9) reveal that the Need for Chaos can be reliably distinguished from a range of measures of antisocial dispositions (e.g., psychopathy and social dominance orientation). Finally, the analyses presented in Section S3 of the SM, Figure S3 in the SM, and associated tests provide evidence for the measurement stability of the scale.
Test 2: The Need for Chaos and Hostile Political Rumors
Overview and Research Design
Test 1 established the Need for Chaos scale. Test 2 examines NFCChaos as a predictor of people’s beliefs and motivations to share hostile political rumors. Our claim is that chaos-seeking individuals will endorse vilifying rumors about political elites because they have grown disillusioned with the political system. In American politics, the Democratic and Republican Parties are the established parties within mainstream politics. We therefore expect a strong Need for Chaos to predict endorsement of rumors about politicians from both the Democratic and Republican parties.
This expectation differs from accounts focused on partisan motivations. These accounts predict that in polarized political contexts, partisans—due to warm feelings toward their party and/or animus toward the out-party—will accept rumors targeting members of opposition parties, but reject rumors reflecting badly on their own party. From a partisan perspective, the party affiliation of the rumor target should significantly influence the strength and direction of the association between partisanship and rumor uptake.
We use survey data from Studies 2–6 to test these expectations. The surveys were not identical, but shared a common template in which participants were asked about their beliefs and intentions to share a series of hostile rumors, their Need for Chaos, whether they identified with the Democratic or Republican Party, and a number of sociodemographic questions.
Beliefs and Intentions to Share Hostile Rumors
All studies asked respondents whether they believed and intended to share a number of hostile political rumors. The rumor content differed across the studies, but always included either three or five rumors about Democrats (e.g., “Former President Obama has been creating a ‘shadow-government’ to take down President Trump”) and three or five rumors about Republicans (e.g., “Republican Tax Bill Passed in December Stops Medicare from Covering Cancer Treatment”). Section S3 of the SM lists all rumors. The rumors were “real”—that is, they enjoyed widespread circulation online at the time of the studies—and included damaging information about the political actors portrayed in the stories. These were deliberate choices: we wanted authentic rumors that could both fulfill partisan goals of denigrating political opponents and, alternatively, disruptive goals of harming the reputation of politicians from both camps.
For each rumor, respondents expressed on five-point scales if they “strongly disagreed” or “strongly agreed” with two statements: (1) “I think the story is true” and (2) “I might share the story on a social media platform (e.g., Facebook and Twitter).” In Study 5, to guard against acquiescence bias, respondents read the rumors with reverse-coded responses: (1) “I think the story is false” and (2) “I would never share the story on a social media platform (e.g., Facebook and Twitter).” We averaged responses to the three rumors about Democrats and the three rumors about Republicans to create separate scales of (1) beliefs and (2) intentions to share hostile rumors about the two parties.
Partisanship
We used the familiar two-step branching measure from the American National Election Studies (ANES) to measure partisanship. The final measure was coded 0 for respondents identifying with the Republican Party or leaning toward the Republicans and 1 for respondents identifying with the Democratic Party Democrats or leaning that direction. This measure was included in all studies except Study 4. To simplify, Independents are removed from analyses of partisanship, but we present key analyses of Independents in Figure S2 in the SM.
Need for Chaos
Respondents in Studies 1 and 3–6 completed the original NFCChaosbattery, whereas respondents in Study 2 filled out the NFCChaos-Rbattery. Confirmatory Factor Analyses confirm the scales’ one-dimensional structure (see Section S2 of the SM).
Analysis Strategy
In all subsequent regression models, we z-score the continuous independent variables, whereas we scale the dependent variables to run from 0 to 1. Coefficients thus reflect percentage points changes in the dependent variables as the independent variables increase by one standard deviation. To ensure that results are not driven by outliers, Section S8 of the SM reproduces all figures of the main text after having removed the 5% of respondents highest in Need for Chaos.
Results
Is the Need for Chaos associated with motivations to believe and share hostile political rumors? We examine this question inFigure 3. The figure shows estimated coefficients from models that regress motivations to believe (left panel) and share (right panel) hostile rumors about Democratic (black) and Republican (gray) elites on the Need for Chaos, partisanship, and a set of covariates (education, gender, income, age, and race).2Figure 3displays the coefficients separately for each study. The top panels show the association between Need for Chaos and rumor endorsement, whereas the lower panels show the association between partisanship and rumor endorsement. Tables S8–S13 in the SM present the regression tables.
As expected, across the various samples, chaos-seeking participants report a significantly greater acceptance of the rumors. Taken as a whole, when the Need for Chaos increases by one standard deviation, intentions to share hostile rumors increase by approximately 10 percentage points of the outcome scale (ranging from 4 in Study 3 to 19 in Study 6; allp’s<0.05). The increase in rumor beliefs is slightly smaller—about seven points across samples (ranging from 2 percentage points in Study 4 to 15 percentage points in Study 6)—but it remains statistically significant and in the direction of our expectations.Figure 3also supports the argument that disruptive sentiments fuel animosity of politicians regardless of their party affiliation. Accordingly, participants with a high Need for Chaos are more likely to endorse rumors targeting both Democrats and Republicans.3
What about partisanship? The lower panels ofFigure 3reveal that Democratic respondents generally endorse anti-Republican rumors, but are less persuaded by rumors reflecting badly on their in-party. Among Republican identifiers, the opposite pattern of results occurs. These results confirm a partisan story of rumor endorsement. However, they come with a caveat: in contrast to the Need for Chaos, partisanship matters more for rumorbeliefsthan intentions tosharethe rumors on social media. Believing is a private act, whereas sharing is a public—and therefore more activistic—act. Furthermore, the absolute size of the coefficients when averaging across rumors appears to be roughly similar for the Need for Chaos and partisanship. Together, these observations suggest that the Need for Chaos and partisanship may be equally strong, yet different drivers of nonnormative forms of political activism.
A final question concerns the interplay between partisanship and the Need for Chaos. Theoretically, a strong party bond could dampen the inclination to share maligning rumors about one’s in-party, even among chaos-seeking citizens. On the other hand, chaos-seekers may feel so politically disillusioned that they will share harmful rumors even about the party with which they nominally identify. To examine this question,Figure 4splits the top panels ofFigure 3by respondents’ party identification. The figure supports the latter expectation: irrespective of party allegiances, a greater Need for Chaos is significantly associated with endorsement of both in-party and out-party rumors.
Test 3: Why Is the Need for Chaos Associated with Motivations to Share Rumors?
Overview
Test 2 demonstrated a consistent association between the Need for Chaos and motivations to share hostile political rumors. This association existed beyond partisan animosity and even extended to rumors targeting party elites with whom the sharer ostensibly identified. Test 3 investigates the goals that individuals high in Need for Chaos seek to accomplish by indiscriminately sharing hostile information targeting partisan elites.
Our theoretical framework contends that the sharing of hostile rumors is a social and instrumental act aimed at escalating social conflict by, for example, mobilizing like-minded others. Yet, there are multiple reasons for why people share rumors—even hostile ones—including, first, epistemic reasons oriented toward enlightening audiences about information believed to be true (Pennycook et al. 2021) and, second, for social but noninstrumental entertainment purposes as encapsulated by (Buckels, Trapnell, and Paulhus’s 2014) study on how “trolls just want to have fun.” Finally, sometimes misinformation is shared with the explicit goal of countering it—for example, by exposing or ridiculing those believing in it (Johansen et al. 2022). This latter possibility opens for an alternative explanation for chaos-seekers’ indiscriminate sharing, which could be in line with the traditional partisan account: perhaps those high in Need for Chaos share rumors about their in-party not to hurt the in-party, but rather to expose the out-party’s lies. In contrast, our account argues that such behavior reflects disdain for all actors within the political system, even those with whom the chaos-seeker ostensibly identifies. In Test 3, we use data from Studies 4 and 7 to test all these accounts (see Section S4 of the SM for details).
Research Design – Motivations for Sharing Hostile Political Rumors
In Study 4, respondents were asked to pick the rumors that they were “most motivated to share” from a list of six anti-Democratic rumors and a list of six anti-Republican rumors, drawn from Study 1. They then indicated their agreement on seven-point scales with four statements about their motives for sharing the rumors: (a) they helped mobilize against disliked groups, (b) they came closest to the truth, (c) they had the largest consequences if they turned out to be true, and (d) their friends would find them amusing. Motive (a) corresponds to our theoretical argument, motives (b) and (c) reflect two key epistemic reasons for rumor sharing, whereas motive (d) assesses whether sharers are simply looking for “fun.”
In Study 7, we focus directly on why individuals high in Need for Chaos share rumors that denigrate their own party. Specifically, respondents were again asked to pick rumors from lists of anti-Democratic and anti-Republican rumors. After selecting a Democratic or Republican rumor, respondents then described how accurately two statements reflected their motivation for sharing these particular stories: (1) “This story would be the most useful story for mobilizing people against the corrupt Democratic [/Republican elites]” and (2) “This story would be the most useful story for mobilizing people against lying Republicans [/Democrats]. It shows what ridiculous stuff they post.” These questions allowed us to explore two potential motives for sharing rumors. From a partisan perspective, participants should strategically share stories to help their party. For example, someone identifying as a Republican should share hostile rumors about Democrats in order to reveal their corruption and share anti-Republican rumors to expose the lies propagated by Democrats. However, for a person fueled by disruptive motivations, the pull of partisan incentives should be replaced by the motivation to share rumors to hurt both in-party and out-party elites. This expectation amounts to an interaction effect: when Need for Chaos is weak, partisan motivations should determine sharing decisions; when Need for Chaos is strong, partisanship should matter little.
Need for Chaos and Partisanship
In Study 4, respondents completed the original NFCChaosbattery, whereas respondents in Study 7 completed the NFCChaos-Rbattery. Respondents in both studies completed the American National Election Studies (ANES) measure of partisanship. As in Test 2, we remove Independents from analyses that focus on partisanship.
Results
Do individuals high in Need for Chaos share rumors to escalate social conflict or for other purposes? To examine this,Figure 5presents estimated coefficients from OLS models that regress responses to the questions about the four different potential motives for rumor sharing (0–1-coded) on NFCChaos(z-scored) and a set of sociodemographic covariates (see Table S15 in the SM for regression tables).4Consistent with findings on “trolling,” we find a significant association between NFCChaosand intentions to share hostile rumors to amuse friends (βAmuse=0.04,p<0.001). In contrast, we find no evidence that people with disruptive intentions share rumors because they believe that the rumors are true—in fact, the coefficient is negative (βTruth=−0.03,p<0.001)—or because they believe that they could have major consequences (βConsequence=0.01,p=0.36). Finally, corroborating our core theoretical expectation, we find that chaos-seekers share rumors to mobilize against disliked groups, Democrats and Republicans alike (βMobilize=0.04,p<0.01).
Does this motivation to mobilize against a disliked group only apply to sharing hostile rumors that target the out-party, or does it also apply to rumors that target the in-party? Using data from Study 7,Figure 6shows predictions from OLS models regressing motives for sharing rumors on NFCChaos-R, partisanship, the interaction between the two variables, and a set of covariates (see Table S17 in the SM for regression tables). The top panels of the figure plot the two motives for sharing hostile rumors about Democratic elites—that is, to mobilize against either corrupt Democrats (left) or lying Republicans (right)—among Democratic (black lines) and Republican (gray lines) identifiers across levels of NFCChaos-R(x-axis). The bottom panels present results for sharing anti-Republican rumors.
shows that when the Need for Chaos is low, partisans of different stripes have widely different motives for sharing rumors. Consider first the anti-Democratic rumors (top panels). Here, Republican identifiers are much more motivated than Democratic identifiers to mobilize against corrupt Democratic politicians (left panel), whereas Democratic identifiers largely concentrate on exposing Republicans of propagating hurtful lies about their party (right panel). At the lowest level of Need for Chaos, these partisan gaps in motives amount to approximately 35 percentage points of the outcome scales. Moving to the bottom panels, we see a similar picture with efforts to mobilize against the out-party underpinning sharing of anti-Republican rumors. Here, Republican identifiers share rumors to expose the lying Democrats, whereas Democratic identifiers share rumors to organize opposition against corrupt Republicans. These are clear signs of politically motivated reasoning.
But what happens when the Need for Chaos increases? In each of the four models, the interaction between partisanship and NFCChaos-R was statistically significant (all p’s < 0.005). The result of this interaction is readily apparent in : as the Need for Chaos grows stronger, partisanship gradually loses power and the partisan gaps shrink. In fact, when the Need for Chaos reaches its peak level, partisans of both stripes become equally—and strongly—willing to share rumors to hurt both parties. Consequently, for chaos-seekers, political sympathies toward political parties appear to matter little for sharing decisions; instead, what matters is that rumors can be used as an instrument to mobilize against the entire political establishment.
The above findings suggest that chaos-seekers’ motivations to share hostile political rumors about both parties—even the party with which they ostensibly identify—reflect a genuine disdain for both parties. In Section S4 of the SM (37–40), we provide additional analyses demonstrating that partisans with strong chaotic motivations feel explicit hostility toward political actors—both elites and rank-and-file voters—from both parties. Furthermore, the analyses show that this reflects a feeling of being abandoned: even if they feel close to a particular party, they feel that both party elites and other ordinary party members have turned their back on them and, as a consequence, they want to punish them by sharing denigrating rumors.
Test 4: Who Needs Chaos?
Overview
Tests 1–3 addressed our first research question: does Need for Chaos shape motivations to indiscriminately share hostile political rumors, above and beyond partisanship? The answer was affirmative and provided evidence that chaos-seekers actively seek to mobilize others against all actors within a loathed political system. In Tests 4–6, we turn toward our second research question: does Need for Chaos—as a characteristic adaptation—emerge from the combination of a dominance-oriented personality and social experiences of personal status loss? Test 4 provides an initial test with a focus on broad experiences of marginalization, whereas Tests 5 and 6 differentiate between distinct types of marginalization.
Research Design
We test the key prediction of Need for Chaos as associated with the dual causes of, first, dispositions to acquire and maintain status in the form of dominance and, second, marginalization using survey data from Study 6 inTable 1(see Section S5 of the SM for details).
To measure an orientation toward dominance-based status, we rely on the 14-item Status-Driven Risk-Taking scale from (Ashton et al. 2010) (e.g., “I would like to live in a country where people who take huge risks have the chance to gain superior social status,” response on seven-point scale: 0=Strongly Disagree, 1=Strongly Agree,α=0.92,M=0.30,SD=0.21). This scale measures willingness to take risks to acquire status and has been argued to reflect dominance orientations (Bor and Petersen 2022; see also Figure S1 in the SM).
We included two measures of social marginalization. First, we use (Hays and DiMatteo’s 1987) seven-item loneliness scale to measure interpersonal marginalization (e.g., “I feel isolated from others,” response on four-point scale: 0=Never, 1=Always,α=0.90,M=0.34,SD=0.26). Second, to measure societal marginalization broadly construed, we asked participants to place themselves on a 10-step ladder (Adler et al. 2000), where people at the top of the ladder (Step 10) are those in society that are best off in terms of job security and respect, and where people at the bottom of the ladder (Step 1) are those that are worst off (M=0.53,SD=0.21).
We used the seven-item measure of NFCChaosfrom Study 1 (α=0.94,M=0.22,SD=0.25).
Results
Is the Need for Chaos associated with dominance orientations and social marginalization? Yes.Figure 7adisplays estimated coefficients from models that regress the NFCChaoson status-driven risk-taking, perceived social ladder placement and loneliness (see Table S20 in the SM for regression tables). These models show that NFCChaosis significantly higher among participants who readily take risks to obtain status and among participants who feel lonely. In contrast, participants believing they belong at the top of the social ladder are significantly less willing to express chaotic motivations. Collectively, these findings support our characterization: chaos-seekers strive for status and feel rejected by friends and society as a whole.5
But how does an orientation toward status interact with social marginalization? , shows the interaction between status orientations, on the one hand, and perceived social status and loneliness, on the other hand. These panels—where the y-axes display the marginal effect of status-driven risk-taking—allow us to determine whether the association between the Need for Chaos and status aspirations grow stronger as people feel more socially marginalized. In the panels, the Need for Chaos is 0–1-coded, whereas our measures of status aspirations and social marginalization are z-scored.
We find support for this prediction. The association between status aspirations and NFCChaosbecomes significantly stronger as perceived loneliness increases (βStatus-Driven Risk-Taking×Loneliness=0.06,p<0.001), whereas the association becomes weaker as people’s perceived placement on society’s ladder grows stronger (βStatus-Driven Risk-Taking×Social Ladder Placement=−0.05,p<0.001). These results suggest that status aspirations only lead to extreme political discontent among people who feel ostracized; among participants who perceive themselves to be at the top of society’s hierarchy, or do not feel lonely at all, the association between Status-Driven Risk-Taking and chaotic motivations disappears. As such, the findings highlight the importance of considering both dispositional traits as well as situational triggers of destructive political motivations.
Test 5: The Need for Chaos and Distinct Types of Marginalization
Overview
Test 4 demonstrates that a Need for Chaos is activated when status-oriented individuals feel socially marginalized. As theoretically discussed, however, these situational status challenges can take many forms. First, marginalization could reflect a loss of status or the inability to gain status. Second, unmet expectations can relate to personal status expectations or to expectations about the status of one’s group. Whereas Test 4 did not distinguish between these different forms of status challenges, the aim of Test 5 is to directly examine how status losses and gains at the personal and group levels, respectively, predict a Need for Chaos. As discussed above, there are theoretical reasons to expect that personal status losses are particularly likely to fuel the form of extreme dissatisfaction that triggers a Need for Chaos.
Research Design
We examine the relative role of losses and lack of gains at the personal and group levels, respectively, using data from Study 8 (see Sections S2 and S6 of the SM for details). The data consist of two independent samples: a representative sample of 1,006 U.S. respondents identifying as white and a convenience sample of 1,157 U.S. respondents identifying as Black. The two samples were collected simultaneously on the basis of the same questionnaire and are treated as one large sample in the analysis.
To measure perceived statuslossexperienced at the personal level [/group level], participants were asked on a scale ranging from “1. Not at all” to “11. Very much,” “I feel that my [/my group’s] deserved place in society is being taken away from me [/them].” To measure perceived inability togainstatus, participants were asked “I feel that I [/my group] am [/is] kept back from gaining the place in society I [/they] deserve.”
We usedNFCChaos-Rfrom Study 2 (α=0.94,M=0.22,SD=0.25).
Results
We regressed the NFCChaos-Ron the four status measures as well as a set of sociodemographic covariates (age, gender, education, and income).Figure 8displays estimated coefficients from these models (see Table S22 in the SM for regression tables). It shows that the NFCChaos-Ris most strongly associated with worries about losing one’s own position in the social hierarchy (βPersonal Status: Loss=0.05,p<0.001) and—to a lesser, but still significant extent—the perception that one is personally being kept back from climbing the social status ladder (βPersonal Status: Gain=0.02,p<0.001). In this model, where all four status measures are entered simultaneously, considerations about status experienced as part of a group seem far less influential: the association between the NFCChaos-Rand perceptions about one’s group’s inability to gain status is almost nil (βGroup Status: Gain=−0.00,p=0.86), whereas considerations about group-based status loss may be associated with less willingness to disrupt the system (βGroup Status: Loss=−0.02,p<0.001).6This latter finding is consistent with work suggesting thatinflatedperceptions of the ingroup’s worth, rather than the opposite, is associated with extreme behavior (Golec de Zavala and Lantos 2020).
Taken together, the results indicate thatpersonalstatus concerns—especially the threat oflosingstatus—motivate citizens to disrupt the status hierarchy. When people are confronted with threats to their own position in the hierarchy, they may endorse chaotic policies as a defense mechanism to regain a sense of dominance.
Test 6: Historical Privilege and the Need for Chaos
Overview
Test 5 demonstrated that chaos-seeking is linked to personal status concerns and, especially, status losses. In Test 6, we ask whether the framework of Need of Chaos—and the central role played by status concerns—helps shed light on contemporary political cleavages. In particular, we focus on the intersection of two of the most potent sociodemographic fault lines in current U.S. politics—gender and race—and whether and how gender and race shape anti-systemic sentiments. From the outset, it is clear that status challenges are a central background of political activism at the intersection of gender and race. For example, overt and subtle forms of discrimination have limited the opportunities for upward social advancement among women and Black people and the resulting frustrations have been fueling political activism, for example, in the context of the Black Lives Matter movement. Furthermore, arguments about status loss are also central to populist rhetoric about being marginalized, which has been shown to resonate with members of traditionally high-status groups such as white people and men (Mutz 2018). These different feelings of disenfranchisement could ultimately lead both historically disadvantaged and historically privileged groups to endorse overthrowing a system that denies them the status and respect to which they feel entitled (whether justified or not). Such multiple pathways to destructive sentiments may help explain the combustibility of current U.S. politics.
On this background, Test 6 is an exploratory analysis of how the intersection of gender and race shapes levels of the Need for Chaos as well as levels of the different status concerns that underlies the Need for Chaos. Furthermore, we explore how the intersection of gender and race shapes the predictors of Need for Chaos, specifically by examining whether different status concerns are stronger predictors for some groups than others.
Research Design
We again use data from Study 8 and test how the average levels of the Need for Chaos vary across participants of different sociodemographic backgrounds (see Sections S2 and S7 of the SM and Test 5 for further details).
We conduct two main analyses. First, we examine the average levels of the Need for Chaos and status concerns across sociodemographic groups defined by race and gender. Second, we use OLS regressions to examine whether and how the four types of status concerns differentially predict Need for Chaos across the different racial and gender groups. Here, we present the main results, whereas Section S7 of the SM reports full model results.
Results
The left-hand panel ofFigure 9displays the average levels of Need for Chaos across groups defined by gender and race. The figure reveals a small but clear set of differences in the felt Need for Chaos (see also Table S23 in the SM). White women have, on average, the lowest score of Need for Chaos (M=0.22, 95% CI=[0.20–0.24] on a 0–1 scale), followed by white men (M=0.25, 95% CI=[0.23–0.27]), Black women (M=0.28, 95% CI=[0.26–0.30]) and Black men (M=0.30, 95% CI=[0.28–0.33]). This initial observation suggests that a Need for Chaos is particularly related to race-based historical disadvantages and less so to gender-based, potentially because of lower general aggressiveness among women (Bartusevičius, van Leeuwen, and Petersen 2020). In the following set of analyses, we explore whether status concerns can help us understand this pattern.
The right-hand panel ofFigure 9displays the average levels of each of the four status concerns from Test 5 across the four demographic groups (see also Table S24 in the SM). On each and every measure of status concern, both Black women and Black men score substantially and significantly higher than white women and men. This pattern is particularly evident for those measures that assess group-based status challenges, but it is also the case for the key driver of a Need for Chaos, feelings of personal status loss. These findings suggest that both experiences of racism not only provoke feelings among Black individuals of being held back relative to other groups in American society, but they also fuel anti-systemic sentiments by generating a fear of losing the gains that Black people have achieved compared to previous generations.
Figure 10examines status concerns as predictors of the Need for Chaos across the intersection of gender and race (see Table S25 in the SM for interaction models). While the levels of status concern illuminate the higher Need for Chaos among Black individuals,Figure 10provides a deeper understanding of chaos-seeking among white men. As is clear, the association between status concerns and the Need for Chaos is stronger among white men compared with any other group. The differences between white men and all other groups are significant for all status concerns, except personal status loss. While group-based marginalization tempers a Need for Chaos among Black individuals, group-based feelings of being unable to advance in society fuels a Need for Chaos among white men. Consistent with notions of aggrieved entitlement among historically dominant groups (Kimmel 2017), many white men are preoccupied with their societal standing and react with aggression against any threat. This also suggests that the average level of Need for Chaos among white men inFigure 9indicates that many white men are quite low in Need for Chaos, but that some—specifically, those feeling threatened in terms of their status—harbor strong chaotic sentiments.
For all other groups, the association between status concerns and the Need for Chaos is roughly comparable. In tandem with the observation that both Black men and Black women feel equally threatened in terms of their status, this raises the question of why Black women display a lower level of Need for Chaos. In the SM, we examine another measure: reported fear of opposing the system (i.e., engaging in anti-system actions). Consistent with their historical marginalized position, we find that Black individuals, independently of gender, experience significantly higher fear of opposing the system than white individuals (see Figure S6 in the SM). Importantly, however, for Black women, but not Black men, this fear of opposing the system correlates negatively with a Need for Chaos (see Table S26 in the SM).
In sum, Test 6 suggests that there are multiple routes to having a high Need for Chaos. While both Black men and women feel marginalized, Black women’s Need for Chaos is inhibited by fear, whereas Black men’s marginalization more readily translates into a high Need for Chaos. In contrast, white men—experiencing both less marginalization and less fear of opposing the system—express a Need for Chaos because of extreme reactions to any perceived status threat including, for example, the expansion of racial and gender equality. While chaos-seeking unites these different groups, it is important to note that they are political adversaries rather than political allies and their goal is to address the specific status challenges they personally face. This may help explain the instability of current U.S. politics: dissatisfaction with the current system is widespread, but comes from diametrically opposed challenges.
Conclusion and Discussion
We have provided a comprehensive psychological assessment of motivations to share hostile political rumors. Consistent with prior work, we find evidence that motivations to share hostile political rumors operate via a partisan logic in which partisans seek to aid their party against their mainstream opponents. Nonetheless, sharing hostile political rumors is not exclusively motivated by a desire to aid co-partisans. An element of the U.S. public indiscriminately shares hostile political rumors because they want to tear down the established system. Among this element, the normal partisan logic of sharing hostile political rumors does not apply and the associated sentiments are as important as partisanship in explaining overall sharing (Tests 1–3). We show that these individuals are motivated by an underlying characteristic adaptation, which we call Need for Chaos, that emerges from the interplay between dominance-oriented traits and marginalized states (Test 4). We find that Need for Chaos is associated with anger toward elites and people of all political allegiances (Test 3) and a craving for personal status (Test 5). These individuals are not idealists seeking to tear down the established order so that they can build a better society for everyone. Rather, they indiscriminately share hostile political rumors as a way to unleash chaos and mobilize individuals against the established order that fails to accord them the respect that they feel they personally deserve. Yet, because there are different routes to feeling marginalized, the goals of distinct groups of chaos-seekers are not compatible. For example, both Black men and white men may be high in Need for Chaos, but for different reasons. Thus, Black men, on average, face more significant status threats than white men but, consistent with theories of aggrieved entitlement of historically privileged groups, white men react more aggressively when they feel threatened (Test 6). These multiple routes to anti-systematic sentiments—and the potential incompatible goals involved—may explain the combustibility of current U.S. politics.
It should be noted that this is a study on self-reported psychological motivations. While prior work suggests that behavioral intentions of sharing translate into actual sharing on social media (Mosleh, Pennycook, and Rand 2020), this is a clear limitation. Nonetheless, our study provides insights into the kinds of thoughts and behaviors that people are motivated to entertain when they sit alone (and, perhaps, lonely) in front of the computer, answering surveys or surfing social media platforms. In an age of hostile political rumors, behavior aimed at disrupting the system does not require much more than that. A few chaotic thoughts that lead to a few clicks to retweet or share are enough.7
Every society contains discontented radicals. In the age of social media, however, these radicalized individuals can more easily find like-minded others and can more easily share their views. On the one hand, these findings suggest that the problem of misinformation is a relatively localized problem, confined to people with extraordinary negative sentiments rather than a broad population-wide problem (see also Osmundsen et al. 2021). On the other hand, even if few individuals are responsible for the circulation of misinformation, these individuals may still have a large reach and a societal impact. This is especially the case because desires for chaos emerge as part of larger frustrations with society and, hence, may not only reveal themselves in the sharing of hostile information on social media. The insurrection against the U.S. Congress on January 6, 2021 is an example in point. Consistent with this, we provide additional analyses in Section S8 of the SM (63–5), which reveals a reliable association between Need for Chaos and behavioral intentions to engage in violence for a political cause.
These later findings highlight the importance of considering the policy implications of the present findings and how to address the feelings of status frustration that underlie chaos-seeking. First, these findings imply that the ultimate policy solution to many problems on social media does not lie in fact-checking or small nudges (but see Pennycook et al. 2021). Rather, politicians must tackle the more difficult problem of investing in policies that address offline feelings of discontent. Second, prior work suggests that these feelings have both economic and cultural causes. Economically, research on populism and political instability suggests that reduced economic and social inequality are important policy solutions (Soskice 2020). This does not imply that anti-systemic sentiments are only widespread among individuals low in socioeconomic status. Increased inequality intensifies status competitions across the entire status hierarchy (Turchin 2016) and can induce even those who are objectively well off to feel that they are losing ground as others pass them. A sense of loss can be further intensified by cultural factors as rapidly changing cultural norms and customs may increase feelings of threat (Inglehart and Norris 2016). According to research on populism, such feelings may intensify further, if people do not feel politically represented or heard (Soskice 2020).
This last observation entails a difficult dilemma. In today’s polarized society, taking seriously the experiences of chaos-mongering opponents is the last thing many people want to do. Nonetheless, the present findings suggest that silencing, ridicule, and other exclusionary reactions will only exacerbate the feelings of marginalization that drive anti-systemic views in the first place. A key political challenge of our time may thus be to address anti-systemic sentiments in ways that remedy the underlying frustrations while remaining committed to democratic norms and principles of equal treatment.
See endnotes and bibliography at source.
Originally by 117:4 (02.17.2023) under the terms of a license.