Empirical formulas for calculating the effective dynamic viscosity of disperse systems.
\\n\\n
Released this past November, the list is based on data collected from the Web of Science and highlights some of the world’s most influential scientific minds by naming the researchers whose publications over the previous decade have included a high number of Highly Cited Papers placing them among the top 1% most-cited.
\\n\\nWe wish to congratulate all of the researchers named and especially our authors on this amazing accomplishment! We are happy and proud to share in their success!
Note: Edited in March 2021
\\n"}]',published:!0,mainMedia:{caption:"Highly Cited",originalUrl:"/media/original/117"}},components:[{type:"htmlEditorComponent",content:'IntechOpen is proud to announce that 191 of our authors have made the Clarivate™ Highly Cited Researchers List for 2020, ranking them among the top 1% most-cited.
\n\nThroughout the years, the list has named a total of 261 IntechOpen authors as Highly Cited. Of those researchers, 69 have been featured on the list multiple times.
\n\n\n\nReleased this past November, the list is based on data collected from the Web of Science and highlights some of the world’s most influential scientific minds by naming the researchers whose publications over the previous decade have included a high number of Highly Cited Papers placing them among the top 1% most-cited.
\n\nWe wish to congratulate all of the researchers named and especially our authors on this amazing accomplishment! We are happy and proud to share in their success!
Note: Edited in March 2021
\n'}],latestNews:[{slug:"webinar-introduction-to-open-science-wednesday-18-may-1-pm-cest-20220518",title:"Webinar: Introduction to Open Science | Wednesday 18 May, 1 PM CEST"},{slug:"step-in-the-right-direction-intechopen-launches-a-portfolio-of-open-science-journals-20220414",title:"Step in the Right Direction: IntechOpen Launches a Portfolio of Open Science Journals"},{slug:"let-s-meet-at-london-book-fair-5-7-april-2022-olympia-london-20220321",title:"Let’s meet at London Book Fair, 5-7 April 2022, Olympia London"},{slug:"50-books-published-as-part-of-intechopen-and-knowledge-unlatched-ku-collaboration-20220316",title:"50 Books published as part of IntechOpen and Knowledge Unlatched (KU) Collaboration"},{slug:"intechopen-joins-the-united-nations-sustainable-development-goals-publishers-compact-20221702",title:"IntechOpen joins the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Publishers Compact"},{slug:"intechopen-signs-exclusive-representation-agreement-with-lsr-libros-servicios-y-representaciones-s-a-de-c-v-20211123",title:"IntechOpen Signs Exclusive Representation Agreement with LSR Libros Servicios y Representaciones S.A. de C.V"},{slug:"intechopen-expands-partnership-with-research4life-20211110",title:"IntechOpen Expands Partnership with Research4Life"},{slug:"introducing-intechopen-book-series-a-new-publishing-format-for-oa-books-20210915",title:"Introducing IntechOpen Book Series - A New Publishing Format for OA Books"}]},book:{item:{type:"book",id:"6979",leadTitle:null,fullTitle:"Parasites and Parasitic Diseases",title:"Parasites and Parasitic Diseases",subtitle:null,reviewType:"peer-reviewed",abstract:"Parasitic diseases are considered nowadays as an important public health problem due to the high morbidity and mortality rates registered in the world. These diseases result in more severe consequences for the social order of tropical and subtropical countries because many of them have low economic income that makes it even more difficult to design and implement health control programs. This situation opens the door to the emergence and reemergence of these diseases; therefore, it is convenient, necessary, and essential to study and update the epidemiological behavior of tropical diseases with the objective of offering official health professionals and institutions current information for decision-making in this area to ensure social welfare.",isbn:"978-1-83880-128-1",printIsbn:"978-1-83880-127-4",pdfIsbn:"978-1-83962-140-6",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.73726",price:100,priceEur:109,priceUsd:129,slug:"parasites-and-parasitic-diseases",numberOfPages:98,isOpenForSubmission:!1,isInWos:null,isInBkci:!1,hash:"f55304c8bd1d92268e33689c368f9e33",bookSignature:"Gilberto Bastidas",publishedDate:"April 24th 2019",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/6979.jpg",numberOfDownloads:6658,numberOfWosCitations:2,numberOfCrossrefCitations:6,numberOfCrossrefCitationsByBook:0,numberOfDimensionsCitations:14,numberOfDimensionsCitationsByBook:0,hasAltmetrics:1,numberOfTotalCitations:22,isAvailableForWebshopOrdering:!0,dateEndFirstStepPublish:"March 27th 2018",dateEndSecondStepPublish:"April 17th 2018",dateEndThirdStepPublish:"June 16th 2018",dateEndFourthStepPublish:"September 4th 2018",dateEndFifthStepPublish:"November 3rd 2018",currentStepOfPublishingProcess:5,indexedIn:"1,2,3,4,5,6",editedByType:"Edited by",kuFlag:!1,featuredMarkup:null,editors:[{id:"238219",title:"Dr.",name:"Gilberto Antonio",middleName:null,surname:"Bastidas Pacheco",slug:"gilberto-antonio-bastidas-pacheco",fullName:"Gilberto Antonio Bastidas Pacheco",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/238219/images/system/238219.jpeg",biography:"Prof. Gilberto Antonio Bastidas Pacheco is a physician with degrees in Pre-hospital Emergency Care, Executive Direction for Senior Management in Health, and Occupational Health and Safety. Along with a Health Management Course equivalent to the Public Health Middle Course, Magister Scientiae in Education Management and also in Protozoology, Prof. Bastidas holds a Ph.D. in Parasitology. He is a full professor at the Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Public Health, University of Carabobo, Valencia, Venezuela. He has authored several articles published in national and international journal, and is also an arbitrator of scientific articles, member of the editorial committees of several journals, and a textbook writer and lecturer.",institutionString:"University of Carabobo",position:null,outsideEditionCount:0,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"1",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"2",institution:{name:"University of Carabobo",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Venezuela"}}}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,coeditorOne:null,coeditorTwo:null,coeditorThree:null,coeditorFour:null,coeditorFive:null,topics:[{id:"909",title:"Parasitology",slug:"parasitology"}],chapters:[{id:"66212",title:"Introductory Chapter: Parasitology and Parasitism Areas of Knowledge That Must Be Constantly Studied",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.85181",slug:"introductory-chapter-parasitology-and-parasitism-areas-of-knowledge-that-must-be-constantly-studied",totalDownloads:2323,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:null,signatures:"Bastidas Gilberto",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/66212",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/66212",authors:[{id:"238219",title:"Dr.",name:"Gilberto Antonio",surname:"Bastidas Pacheco",slug:"gilberto-antonio-bastidas-pacheco",fullName:"Gilberto Antonio Bastidas Pacheco"}],corrections:null},{id:"63084",title:"Organ Pathology and Associated IFN-γ and IL-10 Variations in Mice Infected with Toxoplasma gondii Isolate from Kenya",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79700",slug:"organ-pathology-and-associated-ifn-and-il-10-variations-in-mice-infected-with-toxoplasma-gondii-isol",totalDownloads:860,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Toxoplasma gondii is an important foodborne opportunistic pathogen that causes a severe disease in immunocompromised patients. The pathology and immune responses associated with the ensuing disease have not been well described in strains from different parts of the world. The aim of the present study is to determine the IFN-γ and IL-10 variations and organ pathology in immunocompetent and immunocompromised mice infected with T. gondii isolated from a Kenyan chicken. Two groups of BALB/c mice were infected with T. gondii cysts and administered with dexamethasone (DXM) in drinking water. Other two groups: infected untreated and uninfected mice were kept as controls. The mice were euthanized at various time points: blood collected for serum and assayed for IFN-γ and IL-10 variations. After infection, significant (p<0.05) elevated levels of IFN-γ and IL-10 were observed. A significant decline in IFN-γ and IL-10 levels (p<0.05) was observed after dexamethasone treatment. Histological sections in the liver, heart, and spleen of the mice administered with DXM revealed various degrees of inflammation characterized by infiltration of inflammatory cells. The dexamethasone-treated mice presented with progressively increased (p<0.001) inflammatory responses is compared with the infected untreated mice.",signatures:"John Mokua Mose, David Muchina Kamau,\nJohn Maina Kagira, Naomi Maina, Maina Ngotho,\nLucy Mutharia and Simon Muturi Karanja",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/63084",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/63084",authors:[{id:"255664",title:"Dr.",name:"John",surname:"Kagira",slug:"john-kagira",fullName:"John Kagira"},{id:"255668",title:"Dr.",name:"John",surname:"Mokua",slug:"john-mokua",fullName:"John Mokua"},{id:"255669",title:"Dr.",name:"David",surname:"Kamau",slug:"david-kamau",fullName:"David Kamau"},{id:"255670",title:"Prof.",name:"Naomi",surname:"Maina",slug:"naomi-maina",fullName:"Naomi Maina"},{id:"255671",title:"Dr.",name:"Maina",surname:"Ngotho",slug:"maina-ngotho",fullName:"Maina Ngotho"},{id:"255672",title:"Ms.",name:"Adele",surname:"Njuguna",slug:"adele-njuguna",fullName:"Adele Njuguna"},{id:"255673",title:"Prof.",name:"Simon",surname:"Karanja",slug:"simon-karanja",fullName:"Simon Karanja"},{id:"265279",title:"Dr.",name:"Lucy",surname:"Mutharia",slug:"lucy-mutharia",fullName:"Lucy Mutharia"}],corrections:null},{id:"62896",title:"Malaria Pathophysiology as a Syndrome: Focus on Glucose Homeostasis in Severe Malaria and Phytotherapeutics Management of the Disease",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79698",slug:"malaria-pathophysiology-as-a-syndrome-focus-on-glucose-homeostasis-in-severe-malaria-and-phytotherap",totalDownloads:1254,totalCrossrefCites:3,totalDimensionsCites:5,hasAltmetrics:1,abstract:"Severe malaria presents with varied pathophysiological manifestations to include derangement in glucose homeostasis. The changes in glucose management by the infected human host emanate from both Plasmodium parasitic and host factors and/or influences which are aimed at creating a proliferative advantage to the parasite. This also includes morphological changes that that take place to both infected and uninfected cells as structural alterations occur on the cell membranes to allow for increased nutrients (glucose) transportation into the cells. Without the availability, effective and efficient intervention there is a high cost incurred by the human host. Hyperglycaemia, hypoglycaemia and hyperinsulinemia are critical aspects displayed in severe malaria. Conventional treatment to malaria renders itself hostile to the host with negative glucose metabolism changes experiences in the young, pregnant women and malaria naïve individuals. In malaria, therefore, host effects, parasite imperatives and treatment regimens play a pivotal role in the return to wellness of the patient. Phytotherapeutics are emerging as treatment alternatives that ameliorate glucose homeostasis alternations as well as combat malaria parasitaemia. The phytochemicals e.g. triterpenes, have been shown to alleviate the “disease” and “parasitic” aspects of malaria pointing at key aspects in ameliorating malaria glucose homeostasis fallings-out that are experienced in malaria.",signatures:"Greanious Alfred Mavondo, Joy Mavondo, Wisdom Peresuh, Mary\nDlodlo and Obadiah Moyo",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/62896",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/62896",authors:[{id:"202805",title:"Prof.",name:"Alfred Mavondo-Nyajena Mukuwa",surname:"Greanious",slug:"alfred-mavondo-nyajena-mukuwa-greanious",fullName:"Alfred Mavondo-Nyajena Mukuwa Greanious"},{id:"263433",title:"Dr.",name:"Obadiah",surname:"Moyo",slug:"obadiah-moyo",fullName:"Obadiah Moyo"},{id:"263434",title:"Mrs.",name:"Joy",surname:"Mavondo",slug:"joy-mavondo",fullName:"Joy Mavondo"},{id:"263435",title:"Ms.",name:"Mary",surname:"Dlodlo",slug:"mary-dlodlo",fullName:"Mary Dlodlo"},{id:"263436",title:"Mr.",name:"Wisdom",surname:"Peresu",slug:"wisdom-peresu",fullName:"Wisdom Peresu"}],corrections:null},{id:"62893",title:"Prevalence and Intensity of Intestinal Parasites and Malaria in Pregnant Women at Abobo District in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79699",slug:"prevalence-and-intensity-of-intestinal-parasites-and-malaria-in-pregnant-women-at-abobo-district-in-",totalDownloads:866,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"A prospective study was carried out from 2010 to 2012 at the Hôpital Général d’Abobo (HGA) in Abidjan, in order to determine the impact of infectious and parasitic diseases on child cognitive development. Blood samples were examined by means of drop thick and blood smear, as for stool by direct examination and concentration by formalin-ether method. We evaluated the prevalence and the parasite load of malaria and gastrointestinal parasites and then investigated the risk factors for these disorders. Overall, 331 pregnant women in the last trimester of their pregnancy were enrolled. The plasmodic index was 3.9% with an infestation specific rate for P. falciparum of 100%. Concerning digestive protozoa, it has been observed 71.3% of nonpathogenic, against 9.7% of pathogens, either an overall prevalence of 51.4% of digestive parasites. The calculated average parasitic loads revealed 3089.2 tpz/μl of blood (95% CI, 591.1–5587.3) for malaria, 6.5 eggs per gram of stool (95% CI, 0.4–13.4) for intestinal helminths, and one (1) parasite by microscopic field for protozoa (common infestation). It has been shown that the occurrence of malaria has been linked to the nonuse of impregnated mosquito nets (χ2 = 0.012, p = 0.018) to age. No link could be established between the presence of digestive parasites and the age of pregnant women or socioeconomic conditions (level of education, profession, type of toilet). Malaria is less common in pregnant women, while the rate of digestive parasites remains high.",signatures:"Gaoussou Coulibaly, Kouassi Patrick Yao, Mathurin Koffi, Bernardin\nAhouty Ahouty, Laurent Kouassi Louhourignon, Monsan N’Cho and\nEliézer Kouakou N’Goran",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/62893",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/62893",authors:[{id:"254981",title:"Ph.D. Student",name:"Gaoussou",surname:"Coulibaly",slug:"gaoussou-coulibaly",fullName:"Gaoussou Coulibaly"}],corrections:null},{id:"63554",title:"Current Aspects in Trichinellosis",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.80372",slug:"current-aspects-in-trichinellosis",totalDownloads:1355,totalCrossrefCites:2,totalDimensionsCites:8,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Currently, it is estimated that more than 11 million humans in the world are infected by helminth parasites of Trichinella species, mainly by Trichinella spiralis (T. spiralis), responsible for causing Trichinellosis disease in both animals and humans. Trichinellosis is a cosmopolitan parasitic zoonotic disease, which has direct relevance to human and animal health, because it presents a constant and important challenge to the host’s immune system, especially through the intestinal tract. Currently, there is an intense investigation of new strategies in pharmacotherapy and immunotherapy against infection by Trichinella spiralis. In this chapter, we will present the most current aspects of biology, epidemiology, immunology, clinicopathology, pharmacotherapy and immunotherapy in Trichinellosis.",signatures:"José Luis Muñoz-Carrillo, Claudia Maldonado-Tapia, Argelia López-\nLuna, José Jesús Muñoz-Escobedo, Juan Armando Flores-De La\nTorre and Alejandra Moreno-García",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/63554",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/63554",authors:[{id:"214236",title:"Dr.",name:"Jose Luis",surname:"Muñoz-Carrillo",slug:"jose-luis-munoz-carrillo",fullName:"Jose Luis Muñoz-Carrillo"},{id:"216080",title:"Dr.",name:"Alejandra",surname:"Moreno-García",slug:"alejandra-moreno-garcia",fullName:"Alejandra Moreno-García"},{id:"254888",title:"Dr.",name:"Juan Armando",surname:"Flores-De La Torre",slug:"juan-armando-flores-de-la-torre",fullName:"Juan Armando Flores-De La Torre"},{id:"254889",title:"Dr.",name:"José Jesús",surname:"Muñoz-Escobedo",slug:"jose-jesus-munoz-escobedo",fullName:"José Jesús Muñoz-Escobedo"},{id:"254890",title:"Dr.",name:"Argelia",surname:"López-Luna",slug:"argelia-lopez-luna",fullName:"Argelia López-Luna"},{id:"254891",title:"Dr.",name:"Claudia",surname:"Maldonado-Tapia",slug:"claudia-maldonado-tapia",fullName:"Claudia Maldonado-Tapia"}],corrections:null}],productType:{id:"1",title:"Edited Volume",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"},subseries:null,tags:null},relatedBooks:[{type:"book",id:"9025",title:"Parasitology and Microbiology Research",subtitle:null,isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"d9a211396d44f07d2748e147786a2c8b",slug:"parasitology-and-microbiology-research",bookSignature:"Gilberto Antonio Bastidas Pacheco and Asghar Ali Kamboh",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/9025.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"238219",title:"Dr.",name:"Gilberto Antonio",surname:"Bastidas Pacheco",slug:"gilberto-antonio-bastidas-pacheco",fullName:"Gilberto Antonio Bastidas Pacheco"}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"1692",title:"Parasitology",subtitle:null,isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"b2110e81c765897e4ffdfbd340495e25",slug:"parasitology",bookSignature:"Mohammad Manjur Shah",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/1692.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"94128",title:"Dr.",name:"Mohammad Manjur",surname:"Shah",slug:"mohammad-manjur-shah",fullName:"Mohammad Manjur Shah"}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"5527",title:"Natural Remedies in the Fight Against Parasites",subtitle:null,isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"d705be119e74a50305952521b2b5ece0",slug:"natural-remedies-in-the-fight-against-parasites",bookSignature:"Hanem Khater, M. 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This paper investigates how disinformation-misinformation campaigns, particularly in the political arena, succeed and why they are so hard to challenge, defeat, or deflect. In order to address this topic, the research here draws on many fields: information studies, psychology, philosophy, communication studies, and media studies, among others. The examples studied here are the disinformation campaigns that made Donald Trump the United States president, sustain his continuation in office, and promote his reelection.
Disinformation occurs when the originator of the information intends to deceive. Misinformation need not involve intent; it is merely false. The problem is that in many cases it is not clear whether it is one or the other because of an ambiguous context or questions as to whether misinformation is being used in the service of disinformation (e.g., fake cures for the coronavirus). The use of the hyphenated terms underscores their interaction for this paper. By any measure, much of the rhetoric supporting Donald Trump is disinformation. By any moral or political standard, he is unfit for office, a compulsive liar, incompetent, arrogant, corrupt, ignorant, criminal, mean, petty, and narcissistic. Trump and his enablers, the Republican Party, his administration, his news channels and media, and his supporters are responsible for the deaths of thousands of Americans due to incompetent management of the coronavirus pandemic, the collapse of American democratic norms and the rule of law, and the cruel treatment of immigrants, just to name some of the most prominent failures. In an academic paper, the author is typically enjoined from making such an assessment, but rational people, scientists, political leaders, psychologists, and experts of many shades (many from the president’s own party) concur with this evaluation. Trustworthy, evidence-based sources establish broad consensus among all but Republican officials and the president’s electoral base. For example, there are articles that discuss Trump’s character and authoritarian tendencies [1, 2], his continuous lying [3], his unaccomplished promises [4, 5], his impeachment (almost all Democrats and some Republicans believed that he was guilty), and his use of the Federal government to cover his crimes [6], to name a few.
The QAnon conspiracy theory is perhaps the most extreme disinformation campaign supporting Donald Trump’s reelection. The theory claims that Democrats, all of Hollywood, and other liberal elites are involved in the sex-trafficking of children and murder of children to extend the life of the elites, who have found a way to brew the fountain of youth from the blood of innocents. Trump is the Messiah who fights the so-called “deep state” (a clandestine network entrenched inside the government, bureaucracy, intelligence agencies, and other governmental entities, who secretly manipulate government and government policy). He alone can be trusted. All of his opponents, Democrats and Republicans, are complicit in years of wrongdoing. Redemption will come with a military takeover and mass arrests of the guilty parties. According to the theory, Donald Trump is defending the country from these elites and non-Christians (America is a Christian nation) from this deep-state conspiracy. The director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, is a deep state plant, and hydroxychloroquine, which the president hyped as a treatment and preventative of COVID-19, a claim that scientists have debunked, is the key to addressing the pandemic [7]. When Trump made an error in one of his tweets, by typing ‘covfefe’ instead of ‘coverage,’ his fans thought it was a secret Arabic message [8]. One researcher believes that the codes that QAnon sees in Trump’s tweets are just random typing [9]. Anyone capable of critical thought would realize that such notions are riddled with inconsistencies and unrealistic and impossible goals. Yet a Republican candidate for Congress, Margorie Greene, who espouses the conspiracy theories, won her primary and, given the gerrymandering of her district, is likely to become a member of Congress [10]. There is evidence that adherents of QAnon theory are rapidly increasing around the world [11].
How did we arrive at this state of affairs, where the most outrageous notions are not only entertained but flaunted in the public sphere? Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” [12], 514a-520d, (and “Metaphor of the Line” [12], 509d-511e) come to mind. In it, Socrates describes prisoners who have lived in a dark cave since birth, never seeing the light of day. They are physically constrained in such a way that they cannot look to either side or behind them. Behind them is a fire, and behind the fire is a low wall. Various objects are lifted into the air, manipulated by another group of people who are out of sight behind the wall. The fire casts shadows of the objects across the wall facing the prisoners. The prisoners watch the sequences that the shadows play out and play games predicting the sequences and sounds that reverberate in the cave. When they refer to one of the shadows as a “cup, “for example, they do not actually see a cup, but rather the shadow of a cup, confusing its shadowy appearance with actual reality. The prisoners are coached (by someone like a Socrates) to leave the cave because they believe that their imaginary reality is true reality, and any alternate reality must be false. Trump’s supporters seem to reside in a cave of disinformation, and even if they are challenged to move to the outside (by someone like a Socrates), they want to return and mock those who left, insisting that their fake world is the only true one. Their cognitive state is that of imagining (in Greek, eikasia), a state in which what they believe is reality, and contrary views are “fake news.” In Plato’s view, this state is inferior to that of belief or opinion where perception reflects the actual sensible world.
Why do we have such willing contemporary cave-dwellers? Why are disinformation campaigns successful? The evidence against them is available at our fingertips on the internet, if we search to find reliable resources. Yet just as accessible is the content for defenders, rationalizers, and promoters of lies. How can people not only swallow an outrageous version of reality but also endorse it, propagate it, and refuse to acknowledge any intervening evidence, no matter its source, its credibility, or wide acceptance, and find evidence for their claims in the most tenuous of biased sources?
In order to develop a complete picture of this disinformation-misinformation ecology, the next sections review previous research and publications that will provide a foundation for this paper’s exploration of the success of disinformation in Trump’s America [13, 14, 15].
Any discussion of disinformation must acknowledge the distinction between knowledge and beliefs, between what we can know for sure, either based on direct experience or solid research, and beliefs, which may be turned into truth, shown to be false, or are matters of individual preferences [16]. Because we do not and cannot have knowledge about everything, we often rely on secondhand knowledge that we acquire from others to help us navigate life, such as advice from parents, teachers, and experienced persons about what sources to use to solve a problem or how to sort out political opinions. This secondhand knowledge is derived from persons that we come to regard as cognitive authorities. A cognitive authority is a person, organization, media source, group, or leader whose information one takes as secondhand knowledge based on that entity’s credibility, trustworthiness, and expertise. Persons and news institutions can act as cognitive authorities. The opinions cognitive authorities espouse can be true, false, or a matter of taste: true, if verifiable; false, if falsifiable or unverifiable; or a matter of taste, if based on one’s tastes or preferences, being neither true nor false. Secondhand knowledge that is derived from cognitive authority, thus, for the advice seekers, is an opinion, and certainty varies based on the degree to which they trust their cognitive authorities. This trust grows as the secondhand knowledge is confirmed. It converts from pure opinion to knowledge as the holder gains experience with the topic and with the trustworthiness of the cognitive authority. One can have high certainty about their cognitive authorities, and yet it may be misplaced if the “knowledge” they pass on is not founded on reason, evidence, logic, or facts, or does not cohere with what one knows about the issue at hand.
Consumers of information sources may tend to assume that their opinions are knowledge when they are, at best, secondhand knowledge or, at worst, false opinion(s). For example, consumers of partisan news coverage may believe the claimed authority of the source indicates they have received knowledge and may thus act or talk in such a way that purports what they hear or see is deemed knowledge. Unfortunately, such “knowledge” is unstable if the consumers cannot provide a rationale for what they believe. Many people are mistaken about whether they have knowledge at all and may believe that opinion or disinformation is knowledge. Sources the hearer takes for cognitive authorities can be mistaken or deceitful. At the same time, life would be impossible if we could not act on information we were unable to verify. We proceed in our lives with lots of secondhand knowledge, relying on others, whose advice most often is justified but sometimes is not. To make this difficult issue more manageable, we trust in cognitive authorities.
Deception by cognitive authorities can take various forms. Drawing on Chisholm and Feehan’s “The Intent to Deceive” [17] (1977, pp. 144–145), Don Fallis’s “The Varieties of Disinformation” (2014) [18] describes four major types. The first two are achieved by positive deception (causing a false belief). They include (1) creating a new false belief (e.g., Trump claims that absentee balloting is prone to electoral fraud) and (2) maintaining an existing false belief (e.g., if Joe Biden becomes president, he would take away all guns from citizens). The other two use negative deception. They are (1) causing the loss of a true belief (e.g., that mail-in or absentee ballot voting is a reliable way to vote) and (2) preventing the acquisition of a true belief (e.g., preventing accurate information about the COVID-19 pandemic; ([18], p. 140). (For a more detailed explanation, see [13, 14, 15].)
Deception is most effective when it fosters self-deception. Sartre observed that bad faith is believing what you do not believe: holding or living a contradiction at one and the same time [16]. He describes a mode of living inauthentically, where people may deceive themselves into thinking that they do not have the freedom to make choices for fear of their potential consequences, e.g., that they would have to be responsible for themselves. The psychological position of “willful ignorance” may be related to this condition, knowing something to be true but consciously choosing ignorance, e.g., choosing to believe that the Confederate statues are not symbols of racism.
Self-deception may be a way to embrace forms of ignorance or false information, including lies, paltering, fake news, or doxing. Self-deception makes it possible to maintain our beliefs in the face of contravening evidence. Von Hippel and Trivers [19] describes five varieties of self-deception: (a) biased information search (i.e., only consulting sources that validate our biases or a priori beliefs); (b) biased interpretation (i.e., ignoring parts of a story that do not fit our views); (c) misremembering (e.g., as some Trump supporters who voted for and approved of Barack Obama have come to rationalize Trump’s depiction of him as incompetent); (d) rationalization (i.e., making our arguments fit our biases, such as accepting that immigrants are largely criminals because Trump says so); and (e) convincing oneself that a lie is true (e.g., that Barack Obama had spied on the Trump campaign in 2016).
Self-deception is a socializing and socialized strategy. We convince ourselves of our false beliefs in the process of persuading others, and if and when they are convinced it confirms and sustains our false beliefs. Roy Dings [20], pp. 17–18, points out that this social self-deception may be “situating” or “persuasive.” The first, “situating,” includes the positive, in which we seek likeminded people with whom to associate, and the second is the negative, in which we avoid people who disagree with our views. The second, “persuasive,” includes the positive, trying to convince people to adopt our views, and negative, withholding information that would deter a person from such adoptions [20], pp. 17–18. These strategies are common among political supporters of various stripes, but appear to be particularly common among Trump supporters, who reject any talking points except those in their disinformation ecosystem. Social, or reciprocal, self-deception leads to collective self-deception where a whole group feeds and is fed self-deception. The individual, the group, and the collective dialectically reinforce each other. For example, Trump supporters who are not necessarily homogeneous in how or why they arrived in support of Trump (as we will see later) embrace the common end—that Trumps represents their anger, resentments, a source of power, economic advantage, self-righteousness, or their cause, whatever it may be. (For a more detailed explanation, see [16]).
There are psychological factors and motivations that set and enforce self-deception [16]. The elements may be conscious or unconscious. Conscious self-deception strategies include willful ignorance mentioned above or the avoidance of information. Willful ignorance is different from self-deception because willful ignorance is always intentional, whereas self-deception is not: the willfully ignorant can recognize that they are ignorant, whereas the self-deceived are typically not fully aware that they are self-deceived [21], p. 521. Willful ignorance (being more conscious) is, therefore, more culpable than self-deception. Information avoidance is not thought to be the same as willful ignorance and may not be the same as self-deception. According to Lynch [22], information avoidance is “any behavior intended to prevent or delay the acquisition of available but potentially unwanted information” [22], p. 341. Reasons for information avoidance include the information may demand a change in one’s beliefs, an undesired action, or the information itself, or the decision to learn information may cause unpleasant emotions or diminish pleasant emotions [22], p. 342. Information avoidance can be a strategy for abiding and remaining in a disinformation or misinformation ecology.
Part of the problem of dealing with persons imbued with espousing or promoting fake news is that if one tries to approach them rationally with evidence, facts, and logic, one will fail (though there are many cases, as we will note later, in which what they may count as evidence, facts, or logic do not fit orthodox norms). In addition to the relatively conscious factors listed above, there are unconscious ones as well. There are many psychological factors at play that enable the success of various forms of self-deception, where rational arguments do not work.
We may be prone to think that what we pay attention to is neutral, as if no bias dictates how we bestow our attention. We are predisposed to hear, see, absorb, and interpret particular things that fit with our biases. In phenomenological terms, our unconscious biases might be understood as a “pre-understanding.” Key concepts that flesh out this notion are gullibility and cognitive bias.
J.P. Forgas and R.F. Baumeister [23] summarize the growing literature on the social psychology of gullibility, going back as far as 1947. They define gullibility as “a failure of social intelligence in which a person is easily tricked or manipulated into an ill-advised course of action” [23], p. 2. Gullibility occurs when “an individual’s beliefs are manifestly inconsistent with facts and reality, or [they] are at variance with social norms about reality” [23], p. 2. The psychological foundation of gullibility “appears to be the universal human capacity for trust – to accept second-hand information we receive from others as a proxy for reality” [23], p. 5.
They identify six psychological mechanisms of gullibility: (1) The search for patterns and meaning: because human beings want to make sense of reality, they often find patterns and causation where there is none. This may partially explain how conspiracy theories emerge [23], p. 8. (2) Acceptance bias: “the near-universal tendency for human beings to accept rather than reject information” [23], p. 9. (3) The power of heuristics: “Human beings are more prone to believe interesting, captivating stories and narratives that are salient and easy to imagine” [23], p. 9. The narrative that Trump was a successful businessman may be compelling in this manner. (4) Overbelief in the self: we are prone to “self-serving biases and distortions” [23], p. 10. Thus Trump voters may have difficulty believing they made a mistake about his leadership. (5) Social mechanisms of gullibility: “all symbolic knowledge is socially constructed and shared. Comparing our views and ideas with the views and ideas of others is the way all symbolic reality is constructed” [23], p. 10. It is easy to see how Trump supporters, their personal relationships, their media (cable news and social media), their political and social groups and associations, their party, and their congressional representatives construct a narrative of Trump’s leadership and effectiveness that dialogically reinforces each aspect through their disinformation ecosystem. (6) Epistemological failures to monitor and correct. Human beings fail to monitor and evaluate incoming information correctly in terms of their logical merits [23], p. 11. Because Trump’s supporters are bathed in emotions such as anger and resentment, any logical analysis fails or critical self-reflection fails. If there is any reasoning at all, it is a “motivated reasoning” built on pregiven conclusions, a rationalization to serve one’s biases. We will look the issue of motivated reasoning in more detail later. Cognitive biases are another important psychological dimension of human beings, but our focus will be that of the predispositions of Trump supporters.
Cherry [24] defines cognitive bias as “a systematic error in thinking that occurs when people are processing and interpreting information in the world around them.” The vast research on cognitive bias has identified several aspects that foster disinformation campaigns, some of which are particularly salient in the political domain. When people exhibit cognitive bias, they take particular, flawed mental shortcuts regularly. Wikipedia lists more than 200 types of cognitive bias, many with variant names [25]. In order to make such a large list manageable, Benson [26] proposes four clusters of biases based on whether they involve (1) too much information, (2) not enough meaning, (3) the need to act fast, or (4) confusion about what we should remember. Given the cacophony of available information streams in contemporary society, the first cluster has a high incidence. In the face of too much information, people typically allow their cognitive biases to dictate their thinking, opinions, and actions when they must make quick assessments. Obviously, this strategy is true of all people, anywhere on the political spectrum from left to right, but the focus of the research here are those who lean to the ultra-right. Other factors that invoke cognitive biases include a person’s emotions or motivations, the limits on the mind’s ability to process information, and social pressures [24]. All of these causes seem to be relevant to such groups as Trump supporters, who make errors in judgment about actual facts, who often are engaged in anger and resentment about current events, who are seduced by the social pressures coming from their ingroup (social self-deception and collective self-deception), and who have less flexibility in processing information than Democrats. Among Trump’s voters, age may also be a factor, as in the 2016 election older voters heavily broke for Trump because aging can increase cognitive bias due to lost cognitive flexibility [24].
Thirteen pertinent cognitive biases have particular relevance for disinformation adherents: (1) the availability heuristic, (2) attentional bias, (3) illusory truth, (4) affect bias, (5) negativity bias, (6) anchoring, (7) confirmation bias, (8) the bandwagon effect, (9) stereotyping, (10) ingroup bias, (11) projection bias, (12) the Dunning-Kruger effect, and (13) the self-serving bias. The explanation of these factors with examples from the Trump administration should not obscure the fact that all persons, of any political stripe, are vulnerable to them.
The availability heuristic is a mental shortcut that relies on immediate examples that come to the mind of a person when assessing a particular topic, idea, or decision. It relies on placing greater value on information that comes to mind quickly, based on the assumption that it must be important and more trustworthy than countervailing information. A person’s judgments weigh their assessments based on more recent information, meaning new opinions rely on the latest news [27]. A senior writer at
Second, attentional bias refers to how the direction of attention affects a person’s perception. Engaging this bias, one pays attention to some things while simultaneously ignoring others. For example, a Trump supporter might focus on Trump’s deployment of federal troops to quell “riots,” giving no attention to the fact that so-called riots are mostly peaceful protests against police brutality, and thus believe his claim to be the law-and-order president. Trump often invokes this bias through ad hominem attacks: “sleepy Joe,” “crooked Hillary,” or characterizations of attacks on him, “witch hunt” or “hoax,” so that his listeners revert to the stories he invents to apply such memes.
The illusory truth effect is a bias that occurs when repetition creates bias. This bias mimics the positive feeling we get when we hear information that we know is true in the service of information that may be false but that we have heard before. The Republican party has long been a master of repetition in the sense that it creates discipline such that all Republican officials repeat variants of the same message, such as that trickle-down economics lessen poverty. When Trump reports that he has managed an excellent response to the coronavirus, Republicans as well as
Fourth, the affect heuristic, reflects the tendency to rely on emotions in our initial decisions regarding some action, event, or information. Rather than reflecting on the long-term consequences of a decision, we rely on our emotional state. Business ethics expert, Chris MacDonald, attributes Trump’s 2016 election victory primarily to affect bias:
As he faces another election, Trump claims that he promotes law and order even as racial strife and police brutality erupt, and he speaks approvingly of murderous vigilantes. He inflames emotions such as anger, resentment, and racial hatred to justify the falsehood.
Negativity bias occurs when persons have a greater recall of unpleasant memories than pleasant ones. Even when adverse events and positive events are of the same scale, we feel the negative ones more strongly. Trump and GOP members used this during his first presidential campaign by focusing on Hillary Clinton’s involvement with Benghazi. In his reelection attempt, he hoped fearing crime and the destruction of property would outweigh the memory of watching George Floyd die at the hands of police.
Anchoring is the bias in which one relies heavily on one trait or characteristic (the anchor), usually the first piece of information one hears on a particular topic. When the coronavirus began in earnest, Trump asserted that it was not a serious problem and that it was not more dangerous than the common flu. That initial piece of advice stuck in people’s minds and made them doubt the seriousness of the pandemic and to continue to court the idea it was a hoax.
Confirmation bias involves interpreting information that supports our existing beliefs, even when presented with conflicting evidence. Trump supporters hold all sorts of improbable beliefs because they concord with their preexisting beliefs: e.g., that Trump is a great president; was successful in curbing the coronavirus, its infection, and death rate; cares about poor people; is draining the Washington swamp; is a great businessman; that his tax cuts helped all Americans; and that he has a great plan for healthcare, all of which are false.
The bandwagon effect is the bias in which we support opinions as and when they become popular. We tend to adopt certain behaviors or beliefs because many other people do the same. Trump’s constant use of rallies throughout his presidency exploits this effect. Social media can have the same effect, as seen in the popularization of QAnon theories.
Stereotyping is the bias when we expect a member of a group to have certain beliefs or characteristics because of their group membership. Trump relies on racist stereotypes by calling Black Americans dirty and lacking in intelligence and by suggesting women of color in Congress go back to their countries.
Ingroup bias is the tendency for a person to give preferential treatment to those they perceive as members of their own group. Thus if Trump supporters see Trump as good for the working class, they may support him even if they recognize his harms to people of color. Political scientist Jeffrey Friedman argues that Trump’s harsh policies on immigration stem more from nationalism (ingroup favoritism) rather than xenophobia [30]. Trump supporters tend to make the claim that he always has their backs, although the actuality may something else, e.g. attacking Obamacare and Social Security.
Projection bias occurs when we believe that our current preferences and values will remain the same in the future, which can lead to short-sighted errors. Many Trump supporters, especially poor ones, believe that the current values will remain the same in the future, failing to remember when they had the same view when they voted Obama into office. Many members of minorities voted for Trump, and they projected that their feelings about him would have remained the same throughout his presidency. One suspects that Trump’s actions during his first term may have dissuaded many of those who originally voted for him, illustrating their original projection bias.
The Dunning-Kruger effect is the tendency to overestimate one’s abilities. Trump himself clearly suffers from this effect, given his confidence that he “alone” can solve all the nation’s problems. Many of Trump supporters suffer from this same effect. They overestimate their capabilities in assessing his character and achievements. They are uncritical of their being uncritical and lack the skills and acumen to make a realistic assessment of their own abilities, let alone that of the president.
The final bias, self-serving bias, occurs when one claims responsibility for one’s successes while blaming failures on external factors. Trump seems to have made a lifestyle from this bias. His rewards are due to his “very stable genius,” but his bankruptcies were due to others’ failures. Any promise he has not kept is due to the Democrats’ resistance, Congress’s unwillingness to do his bidding, or unfortunate circumstances (e.g., the coronavirus coming to the U.S. during his presidency), and so on.
We shall see shortly how these biases play into how disinformation campaigns succeed. To see how they play in Trump supporters, we can look at the psychological studies specifically devoted to them.
When reviewing their psychological aspects, it is clear that there is an overlap among studies on willful ignorance, information avoidance, gullibility, and cognitive bias, and that these definitions are approaches to the same issues from different perspectives [16]. To provide details, there are specific studies of Trump supporters. In his paper, “Social Psychological Perspectives on Trump Supporters,” psychologist Thomas Pettigrew [31] identifies factors reflecting five major social psychological phenomena that account for the bulk of Trump supporters’ devotion: tolerance for authoritarianism, a preference for associating with socially dominant groups (social dominance orientation, SDO), prejudice, low intergroup contact (i.e., little familiarity with groups other than themselves), and relative deprivation (i.e., feeling that others are much better off than they are). While acknowledging political factors may be at work as well as other psychological factors, he argues that these five dimensions are particularly relevant.
Pettigrew finds that many Trump supporters are attracted to authoritarian figures. Authoritarianism is characterized by such traits as “deference to authority, aggression toward outgroups, a rigidly hierarchical view of the world, and resistance to new experience” [31], p. 108. Authoritarians see the world as dangerous, and fear guides their response to it. While social psychologists debate whether authoritarianism is a personality construct or a political ideology, Pettigrew argues that “there is no necessary conflict between these two perspectives.” That is, it usually starts as a personality orientation, which then leads to an engagement with right-wing political ideology. Trump’s rhetoric stokes fear, which leads his supporters to consider him to be an authority on matters of American security, leading them to support him in his efforts to secure the borders against outgroups, including through family separation policy and a border wall between the United States and Mexico. His deployment of federal troops on peaceful protesters in Portland, Oregon, and tear gassing of protesters in Washington, DC, reflects his authoritarianism.
In a related study of right-wing politicians who are high on the authoritarian scale, psychologists Alyssa H. Sinclair, Matthew L. Stanley, and Paul Seli found that they fail to update their belief system when confronted with new information and they are motivated to preserve their entrenched beliefs. They concluded high right-wing authoritarians have “a relatively closed-minded cognitive style that negatively influences belief updating” [32]. Donald Trump’s self-deception seems to clearly conform to that of other authoritarian leaders.
Returning to Pettigrew, he defines SDO as “an individual’s preference for the societal hierarchy of groups and domination over lower-status groups” [31], p. 108. People who want to maintain the current social hierarchy have an SDO. They believe members of other groups are inferior to members of their own. People with strong SDO are “typically dominant, driven, tough-minded, disagreeable, and relatively uncaring seekers of power” [31], p. 108. Trump’s assertions that he alone can solve the nation’s problems and that those who oppose him are “losers” (including media critical of him as well as Democratic officials) reflects a belief that they are inferior to members of his group, which include
Pettigrew’s third factor points out that Trump supporters are anti-outgroup, which is manifest in their support for anti-immigrant rhetoric and policy. In the 2016 election, Trump launched rhetorical attacks on immigrants, Mexicans, and Muslims. His actions in office have reinforced that stance: bans on entrants to the country from certain Muslim countries, harsh restrictions for asylum seekers, and the separation of children from their parents at the border as a measure to discourage immigration. Support for Trump correlates positively with a standard scale of modern racism, which Trump has fully articulated in his attacks on Democrats of color in Congress and by having his supporters at his rallies chant “send her back” about Congresswomen Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna S. Pressley of Massachusetts, and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, making references to their ethnic origins [34]. Calling COVID-19 “kung-flu” and the “China virus” reflect the same tendencies [35].
Pettigrew [31], p. 108, also observes that there is growing evidence that Trump’s white supporters have little contact with groups other than their own. They have less experience with minorities such as Muslims, Mexicans, or even Black Americans, than other Americans. Low intergroup contact makes it easier to dismiss members of other groups as foreign, un-American, and/or inferior. Ignorance of others allows one to self-enforce negative stereotypes, as in Trump’s references to immigrants as “animals” [36]. It also supports the tolerance of brutal methods of quelling protests that seek to dismantle racism as well as callousness about the impact of unrest on people in cities, as Trump supporters are disproportionately rural.
Pettigrew’s fifth factor, relative deprivation, may be the most powerful and troubling problem to enable Trump’s rise. While Trump’s supporters are not disproportionately economically disadvantaged—they are disproportionately employed full time and unlikely to live in districts that depend on manufacturing—they perceive themselves as deprived. Trump supporters felt that other members of society were better off than they were and that their expectation of where they would be in life had been severely limited. They were heavily motivated by a sense of loss of status through a sense that American global dominance is in decline and that white people were losing status and dominance domestically [37].
Hours of
Emotion, not critical thought, drives the behavior of Trump supporters. The disinformation campaigns that support Trump appear to be based on cognitive biases, as is evidenced by many Trump supporters screaming at any opposition to him as “fake news,” or calling police for imagined intrusions on their rights by Black people. Anti-Trumpers are called “lib-tards” (combining ‘liberal’ with the slur “retard”).
Creating an ad hoc taxonomy, we can establish four different groups reflect distinctive or related motivations for supporting Trump:
Economic and power profiteers or exploiters. These are senators, House members, cabinet members, other politicians, and friends and associates of Trump, who are driven by an appetite for power and for profit. The appetite for power usually includes the promotion of right-wing political ideology to retain governing power. Initially, many Republicans deplored both the character and the nomination of Trump to the presidency, but after he amassed power and popularity, they changed their orientation to loyalists. Many Republican officials have shown more loyalty to Trump than to traditional conservative values, such as limited government and constraining the national debt; they also have ignored their duty to represent all of their constituents, by refusing to hold town halls with their constituents and voting as a block on party lines. As Michael Tanner [38] of the libertarian thinktank Cato Institute wrote, Trump is the “profligate president,” yet they continue to support him. Trump’s ability to rally his base against a Republican who fails to support him, making a candidate vulnerable to a primary challenge from the right, incentivizes such support. Likewise, some of Trump’s supporters may fear exposure (e.g., for illegal or immoral activities), given rampant corruption in the Trump organization. As well, Trump has delivered on many conservative agenda items, such as appointing federal judges and crippling government agencies and public goods (like the post office).
White evangelical Christians, Christian Dominionists, and other religious supporters. These people believe or have come to believe through their religious leaders and problematic interpretations of the Bible or religious traditions that Trump’s ascendancy is a direct consequence of God’s will. Their objective is to overturn the legal grounds for abortion, to have conservative judges appointed in the courts, to have “religious freedom,” and to make the United States a Christian nation.
In the 2016 election, 81% of white evangelicals voted for Trump, in spite of his record of adultery, divorces, bizarre work ethic (“deals” and bankruptcies), broken promises, lies, racism, and allegations of sexual assault [40]. Many evangelicals rationalize their behavior by likening Trump to Persia’s King Cyrus II (the Great) from the Book of Isaiah, who lived between 590 and 529 B.C.E. Though not a Jew, Cyrus was seen as an instrument appointed by God, a heroic pagan ruler who freed the Jews from captivity in Babylonia. Though pagan, he was ethical and allowed his conquered lands to retain their traditions, including those of the Jews, and he led the Jews back to Jerusalem to rebuild the Temple and restore the city. His religious supporters argue that Trump, like Cyrus, is a powerful figure who is not a believer yet is an instrument being used by God to serve God’s master plan, a strong leader fighting on the side of the righteous. However, Isaiah’s depiction shows Cyrus as an ethical leader who did not foster divisiveness, hatred, false accounts, or challenges to civil authorities or institutions to maintain his authority. These religious supporters exercise “motivated reasoning,” a rationalization of their dubious interpretation of a Bible story in relating it to Trump, feeding their individual, social, and collective self-deception, which reinforces each other and are sustained and promoted by their religious leadership. The effect is undermining American democracy [41].
Dominionism is centered on the removal of the idea of the separation of church and state from the Constitution. There is a hard version, which advocates that the Constitution and current form of government must be overthrown and must be replaced by a government based on Biblical law as articulated in the five books of Moses (i.e., Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy), ironically in the same way they fear that Sharia law will dominate the land should Muslims come to power in the United States. While this version has few adherents, many Christian fundamentalist denominations embrace a softer version, which calls for merging the church and the state, restoring to Christians control over all political and cultural institutions, such that the United States will be an overtly Christian government [42]. The viewpoint is promoted, based on the idea that Christians are currently being persecuted for their beliefs, particularly in the attacks on their refusal to provide goods and services for LGBTQ+ people in the marketplace, which they claim violates their “freedom of religion.” They interpret freedom of religion to mean the ability of merchandisers in the public sphere to discriminate against persons or institutions that run contrary to their religious beliefs. It also is invoked when children in public schools are said not to be allowed to pray, by which they typically mean Christian prayer. In fact, they are allowed to pray as long they do not disrupt others and initiate the prayers themselves.
There is even a strain of conservative Catholics who support Trump, as evidenced in the book The Catholic Case for Trump by Austin Ruse [43]. Ruse’s argument largely relies on claims that Trump is pro-life, but it conveniently ignores what he has actually done, such as putting children in cages, attacking environmental rights, attacking LGBTQ+ protections, and engaging in the most corrupt practices in government. Even Pope Francis has called Trump out on his anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies, and his hypocritical pro-life stance [44]. The only area where Trump supports the Catholic viewpoint is his appointment of anti-abortion judges.
Media supporters such as
The true believers, sometimes called “the cult of personality,” colloquially referred to as Trump’s base. Their motivations include resentment, greed, prejudice or racism, feelings of relative deprivation (that they fall short of what others have accrued in life), anger, vindictiveness, self-righteousness, and negative polarization. In negative polarization, voters side with a given candidate primarily from a distaste for the candidate’s opponent [47, 48]. In a study of both Trump and Hillary Clinton supporters, K. Jasko et al. [49] found that one’s individual sense of personal significance predicts hostility to the preferred candidate’s opponents.
Cognitive neuroscientist Bobby Azarian [50] summarizes four factors that support true belief in what he calls the “unwavering” support of Trump. The first is the Dunning Kruger effect (the cognitive bias mentioned above): it implies that Trump’s supporters are misinformed but also lack the capabilities to become aware that they are misinformed. The second is hypersensitivity to threat, which is common among conservatives. As Azarian [50] writes, “As long as Trump continues his fear mongering by constantly portraying Muslims and Mexican immigrants as imminent dangers, many conservative brains will involuntarily light up like light bulbs being controlled by a switch. Fear keeps his followers energized and focused on safety.” That threat was the major threat before his election. Right before the 2020 election, it has shifted to create fear against protestors retaliating against police brutality of Black Americans in major cities. The third factor, terror management theory, suggests that reminders of one’s own death stoke incite a strong defense of the ingroup and aggression toward others. Azarian writes, “By constantly emphasizing existential threat, Trump creates a psychological condition that makes the brain respond positively rather than negatively to bigoted statements and divisive rhetoric.” The fourth is high attentional engagement. Azarian cites a study [51] of participants engaged in political ads that shows that Trump keeps viewers engaged more and for longer periods and that they were more emotionally aroused than those watching Hillary Clinton ads. This pattern held for both Clinton and Trump voters. Azarian attributes this to Trump’s experience as a reality TV star:
Azarian observes: “As a cognitive neuroscientist, it grieves me to say that there may be nothing we can do. The overwhelming majority of these people may be beyond reach, at least in the short term. The best we can do is to motivate everyone else to get out to the voting booths” [50]. This observation holds true for the 2020 election as well.
As a consequence of their loyalty, one of the sad aspects of the Trump presidency is that he enabled his supporters to unleash their anger, rage, and explicit prejudice by echoing his.
Trump supporters tend to label themselves as conservative, but they are not referring to things like fiscal responsibility. Under the Trump administration, the deficit soared, even before the economic demands of the pandemic. Government is somewhat limited, and badly executed under Trump, supporting a long-standing Republican belief that government is corrupt and wasteful by being corrupt and wasteful [52], except for the following instances (not all due to Trump but often the result of a conservative agenda) of intrusion: (1) into hiring or providing medical treatments of military transgender individuals (Trump instituted a ban on transgender individuals in the military in 2019) or other forms of discrimination against LGQBT+ individuals; (2) into the right to have an abortion (in their defense, anti-abortionists claim that fetuses are individuals and have the right to life); (3) into the protection of companies with a particular religious viewpoint from having to serve all customers in the public sphere (e.g., the right of a cake baker to refuse to make a wedding cake for a gay couple Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission); and (4) into exemptions to the Affordable Care Act (In Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. Hobby Lobby Stores argued that because its store was founded on specific religious principles, it should be excluded from the demands of the Affordable Care Act, which mandates that companies provide access to contraception and the morning-after pill). While the latter two can be seen as an attempt for less government intrusion, they invite government intrusion to enforce them. Typically hostile to foreign powers’ intrusion into American politics, conservatives have turned a blind eye when Trump cozies up to dictators like Putin, ignores the concerns of U.S. intelligence agencies about Russian intrusion into U.S. elections, and takes no action against Russia for its bounties for the deaths of American soldiers in Afghanistan. According to Wikipedia, conservatism in the United States
Current challenges to that vision from Trump and the GOP include: respect for American traditions has enshrined racism and white privilege; support for Christian values has come to mean a certain problematic version of Christianity (e.g., one that sees no problem with putting children in cages), and hostility to such genuine Christian values, such as helping the poor and needy, or hostility to the values of other religions, humanism, or atheism; moral universalism tends to reject the cultural differences of a pluralistic society; republicanism is devoted to oligarchy and moving to fascism, a non-representative form of government run by a single branch of government (the executive). The Republican party and the Justice Department have failed to implement any checks and balances on Trump and his administration. The supposedly pro-business policies promote a capitalist ideology on all institutions in civil society, which by its nature ignores or exploits the poor, marginalized, and disenfranchised (e.g., providing farm-labor immigrants with poor wages and work conditions). Much to the chagrin of many American farmers, Republicans have soured on free trade [54]. Instead of anti-communism (granted that Russia is strictly not communist anymore but totalitarian, but still an enemy of the United States in the traditional conservative view), Trump welcomes Putin and wants to put him in the G7, and Republican Senators Johnson and Grassley have become conduits of Russian propaganda for the reelection of Trump [55]. According to a Gallup poll, having a favorable view of Putin has more than doubled, from 12–32%, between 2015 and 2017 among Republicans [54]; in 2014, only 9% of Republicans though that Russia was a friend or ally, but in 2018, 23% did [54]. The party is no longer pro-individualism for anyone but primarily white, able-bodied, straight males. Public goods are derided, e.g., healthcare coverage for all or wearing a mask during the coronavirus pandemic. Trump has twisted American exceptionalism such that, instead of seeking to be a moral leader in the world, America depends on its military dominance. As for the defense of Western culture from the perceived threats by communism, socialism, and moral relativism, Trump proclaimed in his reelection campaign that the election of his opposition will lead to all three, but he ignores the worst threat to America, whose source is him and his administration: creeping fascism, corruption, and the failure to adhere to the Constitution and the rule of law. Looking at the evolution or dissolution of conservatism, is there much left to conserve? Doug Bandow of the Cato Institute, the conservative thinktank, asserted that Trump’s presidency is marred with failure in conservative matters [5].
If Trump and his supporters do not listen to bonafide authorities in conservative circles, what authorities do they heed? [16]. We must understand something of the character of cognitive authorities to see what enables their emotional response to Trump. If disinformation and misinformation depend on self-deception, social self-deception, and collective self-deception; if adherents engage in psychological methods to facilitate that self-deception by making themselves willfully ignorant or avoiding information contrary to their beliefs; if they are gullible, and fall prey to various cognitive biases that enforce their beliefs, cognitive authorities are a major factor in allowing all of these mechanisms to come together. A cognitive authority is a source one turns to when one lacks experience, education, knowledge, time, or inclination to acquire direct information. A cognitive authority is a person, organization, media source, group, or leader whose information one takes as secondhand knowledge based on that entity’s credibility, trustworthiness, and reliability. In his book on the subject,
Credibility involves both trustworthiness and expertise. And trustworthiness “captures the perceived goodness and morality of the source.” Rieh adds that “expertise is likewise an important factor given its close relationship to people’s perceptions of a source’s ability to provide information that is both accurate and valid” [57], p. 1337–1338. While the
Viewers of
In reality,
It would be helpful to understand the relationship of news consumers and their loyalty to sources because one can argue that source loyalty is a measure of its cognitive authority, that what they are reporting is a source of secondhand “knowledge” for them. The Pew Research Center did a survey on “The Modern News Consumer” in 2016 [61]. They found that, despite digital advances, most Americans still share news by word of mouth. Older Americans tend to use the same sources for news, and they prefer TV to other sources, such as print sources. Younger people are less enthusiastic about news, and most get their news online. Democrats are more trusting of national news media than Republicans. Liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans are more likely to get one-sided news from family and friends than news sources. Conservative Republicans are more likely than liberal Democrats to say that they are content to get one-sided news from family and friends [61].
Loyalty to a news source is a measure of consumers’ sense of credibility and trustworthiness. The fact that Republicans are comfortable getting one-sided news and the fact that most news consumers still share news by word of mouth features reinforce certain aspects of the disinformation ecology that
A study Pew undertook in the fall of 2019 gives a more up-to-date understanding of
Around four-in-ten Americans trust
Republicans [(2/3) and Republican-leaning independents (65%)] trust
On an ideological scale, the average
People who cite
Americans ages 65 and older account for around four-in-ten of those who say their main source is
Around nine-in-ten who turn to
Those who name
The survey also indicated that on a scale of warmth, just a quarter of U.S. adults gave Trump a rating between 76 and 100 (100 being the warmest). So, despite his general apparent lack of warmth, he still receives high approval ratings [62]. On the other hand, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi got a very cold rating (between 0 and 24) by those who used
People who get their news from outlets other than
Their viewers rejection of every other major news source, pandemic experts, medical institutions, scientists, and critical thinking individuals is remarkable.
When we speak of
A survey of some of the narratives the Fox pundits have “reported” show how
Beyond these examples, a report in the
Contrary to good journalistic practice,
Apart from their need to be a major player in influencing Republican and conservative opinion, another of the major motives for
Regardless of topic,
Understand the elderly white conservative viewer’s pre-tribal mindset, which is a compilation of their resentments, indignations, cultural values, religious values, political values, racial perspectives, regional outlooks, and worldviews.
Scare or outrage the crap out of viewers by boring down on a recently exposed tribal nerve like a psychic dentist with a drill, presenting hearsay or an innately scary image of non-white/non-Christian foreigners, immigrants, or terrorists doing horrible things.
Produce each seven-minute rigged outcome opinion-debate segment around the carefully selected partisan hearsay such that the “fair and balanced” debate is massively rigged for the conservative pundits on the program to. . .
Deliver the climactic and righteous rhetorical victory for the partisan right-wing viewer to trigger the jolt of dopamine and serotonin that the addict anticipated and knew was coming [58], pp. 485–486.
In other words, Smith argues that
The dominance of
While we have been using an addiction metaphor, following Tobin Smith, Devon Price makes the point that
In such a way, they are addicted but the source of their original addiction was a willingness to fall prey to their biases and self-deception, allowing it to be fostered into social and collective self-deception, which in turn reinforce their original self-deception.
To summarize how
It starts with a maelstrom of grievances, resentments, a sense of invisibility or a lack of importance in its viewers, where the wider culture often challenges many of their core values.
These messages are myths, tropes, and narratives often detailed during the shows of their various pundits. They include persistent myths about Antifa conspiracies, fast fixes, or lies about the coronavirus epidemic or the extraordinary leadership of Trump. They echo the view that God rewards those who work hard and other variations of the Protestant work ethic or prosperity gospel (and that social structure plays no role in economic stability or success, including the stigmatization of poverty). Jesus was white, capitalism is God’s way, and Christians are being persecuted. At the same time, Fox claims that immigrants are taking jobs and jobs are being exported abroad. It presents white privilege as the natural way of things and racism as a thing of the past. Kneeling during the national anthem is an insult to the flag or the country. It satirizes the mass media as pushing values that are un-American. It claims Jews have assumed positions of power and money they do not deserve, and that restrictions on gun ownership are an assault on basic human rights and the Constitution. It mirrors and accentuates the lies on radical right-wing websites, such as Breitbart [78], p. 14. The emotional triggers that it fosters are legion, not to say they are true, only that they work.
One engages in “motivated reasoning,” especially when the topic at hand is something that we care about. It is the effect of emotions that we associate with a given topic at a primal level. It is not really reasoning but rationalization, making our arguments fit a pre-determined end. Not only does it involve a confirmation bias but also a “disconfirmation bias” “in which we expend disproportionate energy trying to debunk or refute views and arguments that we find uncongenial” [79]. When they grab onto what appears to be scientific evidence that supports their bias, they pounce on it. Mooney asserts: “Scientific evidence is highly susceptible to misinterpretation. Giving ideologues scientific data that’s relevant to their beliefs is like unleashing them in the motivated reasoning equivalent of a candy store” [79]. Mooney anticipated much of the conflicting and inaccurate positions that Trump supporters took in dealing with the coronavirus. Such narratives support their self-deception and their social self-deception.
These arguments from motivated reasoning or memes, myth, tropes, and narratives are reinforced and repeated throughout the disinformation-misinformation ecosystem to the point of addiction, where viewers’ self-deception dialectically reinforces and is reinforced by the social and collective self-deception of others and selective events in the disinformation-misinformation ecosystem. This disinformation-misinformation ecosystem is a filter bubble or “propaganda feedback loop” [78], p. 33. Morrison [80] suggests that right-wing media keep over a quarter of Americans siloed in this “propaganda feedback loop.”
Fox provokes fear, moral outrage, and self-righteousness. Megan Garber of
Because of this relentless moral outrage, viewers are prone to believe irrational or unfounded claims or assertions, and to regard all other venues as fake news. This moral outrage is reflected in the actions of the viewers, which are then taken into the market place, such as the refusal to wear masks for the coronavirus pandemic or to call the police on any Black person they think is threatening them.
Misinformation and the authorization and propagation of misinformation causes mortal damage, including the thousands of deaths by the coronavirus. Public intellectual Eugene Jarecki’s Trump Death Clock (https://trumpdeathclock.com/) in New York City’s Times Square, calculates that Trump’s incompetence, mismanagement, and misinformation has caused 60% of American deaths from COVID-19, some 115,419 as of September 13, 2020.
While it seems exaggerated to say simply that liberals want facts and conservatives want their biases reinforced, and that liberals embrace journalism; while conservatives believe propaganda, Benkler et al. believe that the research they performed generally indicated that this was the case. With the more measured but still emphatic words, “the right-wing media ecosystem differs categorically from the rest of the media environment” and has been much more susceptible to “disinformation, lies and half-truths.” As for
Even in regular assessments such as who has scientific expertise,
They found two forms of evidence to support their hypothesis:
The second finding identified a mechanism that could explain this effect. When asked to evaluate whether an individual of elite academic credentials, including membership in the NAS, was a “knowledgeable and trustworthy expert,” subjects’ answers proved conditional on the fit between the position the putative expert was depicted as adopting (on climate change, on nuclear waste disposal, or on handgun regulation) and the position associated with the subjects’ cultural outlooks [82], p. 27.
The study suggests that what different individuals regard as scientific consensus depends on their cultural values. So
Another major influence in the disinformation-misinformation ecology is social media.
The problem with the internet is that is a self-serve “information” bank. For many Trump supporters, right-wing social media (e.g., Breitbart, Truthfeed, Infowars, Gateway Pundit, Zero Hedge) is a self-serve disinformation or misinformation bank. Right-wing ideologues, foreign agents, and clickbait entrepreneurs produce a deluge of disinformation of memes and narratives to solicit (at a minimum) and inflame (at a maximum) the disinformation seeker at these sites. Self-serve engagement is mediated by cognitive bias, confirmation bias, and steerage to selective sources. Generally, there are little restrictions on the kind of content that is made available.
Beyond specific right-wing media sources, as political commentator and professor Robert Reich argued in the Guardian, Facebook and Twitter are alarmingly influential. As he wrote:
Reich does not reference the source of his data, but given his expertise and academic credentials, one would assume that they were reliable. However, the Pew Research Center survey provided a more conservative estimate. They did an analysis of their surveys from October 2019 through June 2020. It indicated that only 18% of U.S. adults get their political news through social media (versus 25% that use news websites or apps, 16% that use Cable TV, 16% that use local TV, 13% that use Network TV, and 8% that use the radio). They found that users of social media are less likely than other news consumers to follow major news stories closely, such as information about the coronavirus pandemic, and that they are less knowledgeable about these topics. The largest group of social media users, 48%, are under 30, while 40% are between 30 and 49. Compared to the U.S. population generally, they are less likely to be white, have lower levels of education, have lower political knowledge than other groups, and were more likely to have heard a conspiracy theory that the pandemic was planned. Social media users were far less likely to be already following the election very closely in the study period; only 8% were, which is a quarter or less of the proportion of cable TV watchers (37%) and print media consumers (33%) [84].
The Pew Research Report did not indicate what it includes in social media. Beyond Facebook and Twitter, there is YouTube, WeChat, Instagram, Weibo, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn, the internet offers Telegram, Reddit, Baidu Tieba, LinkedIn, LINE, Snapchat, and Pinterest. Many of these are hotbeds of misinformation and disinformation. According to Wikipedia, social media sites share the following properties: they are interactive Internet-based applications; they run on user-generated content (e.g., posts, texts, videos, photos); users have profiles that give some information about them; and they facilitate interactions between members and/or groups [85].
One of the most problematic aspects of social media are the number of hate groups and the far-right partisans that use it to attract followers and disseminate their propaganda. Facebook, Twitter, Spotify, PayPal, GoDaddy, YouTube, and others have suspended users connected to the far-right after the Unite the Right rally. Those suspended argued that the action attacked their free speech rights and used coded messages to get around any problem of censorship. A report of “Hate in America,” a project produced by the Carnegie-Knight News21 initiative, did a study of far-right users of Facebook, Twitter, Gab, VK, and others during a two-week period in June 2018. They tracked more than 3 million followers and compiled more than 2500 posts from these platforms that threatened harm against Black Americans, Latinos, Jews, and LGBTQ+ people. These posts got over a half-million likes and were shared 200,000 times. This evidence shows the strength and breadth of these groups, who gain power by assembling a collective voice, despite some restrictions by some platforms [86].
Perhaps the major problem with social media is the fact that anyone can use or create or propagate social media to disseminate clear lies and falsehoods on the internet in the name of intellectual freedom or freedom of expression. Mark Zuckerberg perhaps best exemplified this in a speech at Georgetown University where he argued that Facebook should be unfettered in intellectual freedom, including political advertisements of outright lies (e.g., pro-Trump reelection campaign advertisements that include lies about his opponents). He takes the view that the marketplace will work it out—the lies will be discovered, eventually rejected or ignored. He bases his argument, as do other free speech advocates, on the First Amendment.
Harvard legal expert Yochai Benkler argues that Zuckerburg’s interpretation of the First Amendment as preventing his company from suppressing false or dangerous speech is erroneous. He argues that the First Amendment is only about government involvement in speech; it does not apply to private speech or private parties, of which Twitter and Facebook are examples [80]. Evidence also shows that untruths are not sorting themselves out in the disinformation-misinformation marketplace. Disinformation spreads unchecked by corrections across the internet
Also, it is simply wrong to believe that Facebook as a whole is balanced or neutral and has no particular bias. The
Despite Zuckerburg’s claims, Facebook is not a neutral information playground and skews to the right. And so, the belief that individuals are capable of sorting out the truth for themselves in such an environment is problematic to say the least. For example, in 1987 the Reagan administration revoked the
Obviously, it is nice to think that the truth will always win out. But in the Age of Disinformation, this approach seems too simplistic. Thus, we must ask, is there a limit to free expression when that expression leads to harmful acts toward demonized populations; the destruction of trust in political, governmental and media institutions; the loss of expertise; and the denigration of science and evidence?
What makes this sorting out even more difficult is the spread and speed of disinformation, and the inflammation of emotional triggers (memes, tropes). MIT researchers Soroush Vosoughi, Deb Roy, and Sinan Aral [90] find in a study of rumor cascades from 2006 to 2017 that false information spreads more quickly and broadly than truthful information and that those on the right are more susceptible and more prone to disseminate false information than those on the left. They conclude:
Once acquired, false information is hard to dispel. Psychology Professor David Rapp’s research on processing inaccurate information reveals that our brains quickly memorize information without remembering its source or validity. If we discover at a later time that the information was false, that realization does not override the initial impression [91], p. 282.
Cognitive issues of misremembering information complicate sorting false information. Such social media disinformation is spread by trolls, such as Russian operatives and Trump and right-wing supporters on the one side, and liberals and progressives on the other side (in addition to the clickbait entrepreneurs who solicit right-wingers [46]). The two sides are not equivalent. As we noted above, Facebook is more infused with right-wing activity [88].
YouTube in particular engages a rabbit hole phenomenon that increases right-wing radical viewership. When perusing YouTube videos for particular content, such as a specific conspiracy theory, the site’s algorithm suggests more provocative videos to view, which in turn suggest even more provocative videos to view. The impact is to advance Google’s profits, but with dire political consequences. Sociologist and information and library science professor Zeynep Tufekci declared YouTube to be “one of the most radicalizing instruments of the 21st century” because of these mechanisms [92]. According to the analysis of
Before the internet, aggregating in groups to form hate speech collectives was more difficult. Physical proximity tended to be a constraint. With the advent of the internet and social media groups, it is easier for persons with radical ideas to find like-minded individuals, creating a forum with a loud voice, which in turn can convince others to join their cause. It creates a crowd effect that creates an appearance of a large audience for a particular theory or belief. The mass shooting directed at Latino people at an El Paso Walmart in August 2019 can be traced in part to the gunman’s participation in 8chan, a social media group that permits anonymous postings. Slate magazine descried 8chan as “[a]n anonymous, meme-filled internet backwater…a place for white supremacists to indoctrinate others—particularly white men—into bigoted ideologies” [94]. Social media like 8chan not only aggregate a forum, but deceptively entice its followers to believe that they have a loud voice and that their group is larger than it really is, luring more members into the group.
While there are concerns for groups like 8chan, Facebook illustrates a broader problem of regulating speech on the internet, particularly hate speech or conspiracy theories. The problem with conspiracy theorists is that they view any attempt to correct their theories by appealing to contravening evidence as a verification and extension of the conspiracy theory itself, another sign of a cover up. Believers in QAnon have stretched any limits of credibility in the theories they espouse for which it can supply little or no evidence or which are virtually impossible (e.g., one cannot verify that Trump will be saving the world from a satanic cult of cannibals and pedophiles). Should their speech be curtailed? Is there a limit to free speech? The first amendment asserts that the “Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.” But Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes asserted in Schenck v. United States [95] argued that “the character of every act depends on the circumstances in which it is done.” If a man falsely shouted fire in a theater and causes panic, he would not be protected on the basis of free speech. The “question in every case is whether the words are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent” [95].
Any person that creates panic in a theater by shouting fire should be censured if not jailed. The hate speech and conspiracy theories on the internet have gotten to the point where physical harm results. The attack on the El Paso Walmart was just one example; there has also been violence against Jews, Muslims, and members of the LGBTQ+ community because of the right-wing radical social media ecosystem. Other problematic speech of the right-wing media includes supporting Trump administration’s imprisonment of immigrants and their children (leading to the spread of disease and death, not to mention psychological trauma); their applause of the killing of two peaceful protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin, by a right-wing extremist; their lies about the growth of coronavirus infections and death; and so on. The support of false ideas and ideologies and the destruction of institutional norms and trust in expertise have created the equivalent of a stampede in a crowded theater. The loud, in-your-face refusal to wear masks as a civil liberties badge of honor in the war against the coronavirus in the United States not only denigrates the role of public health expertise but actively promotes the spread of the disease to the public, ignoring the rights and health of individuals who follow public health recommendations. The latter is not only a matter of yelling fire in a crowded theater but also fanning the flames. The foundation of a liberal democracy has been catapulted into chaos, where sources or institutions are politicized and not trusted (e.g., the intelligence community, the Justice Department), thereby attacking the very essence of democracy and democratic institutions.
To add to the mix, there is self-deception, social and collective. How do we cope with collective self-deception, where the truth is a contrived second-hand or false opinion, paraded as knowledge? The willingness of individuals to seek the actual truth appears to be extensively diminished, given that their cognitive authorities have all the “truth” and that only their venues have access to the “facts,” and independent inquiry is fraught with seductive pitfalls designed to threaten to send one to hell, figuratively if not literally, based on one’s religious persuasion (e.g., white evangelicals who believe that Trump was appointed by God and ministers who claim that a voter will be going to hell if they do not vote for him [96]). Even within orthodoxy, there are problematic results for questioning the powers that be: the corrupt Athenian government put Socrates to death for corrupting the youth by having them question the orthodoxy. In these days, “orthodoxy” (which comes from “right opinion” in Greek) is often a contrived constructed reality that one can call genuine fake news, validated through collective self-deception and false cognitive authorities.
Robert Reich [83] argues that two actions need to occur to bring rational control back to the internet. First, there should be some anti-trust action that would break up the large providers. He argues that they have a too broad and monolithic influence. Second, we must prevent such providers from pretending to be neutral providers of information for which they have no responsibility. Facebook and Twitter spread Trump’s lies (among other untruths, distortions, paltering, doxing, fake news, and conspiracy theories), and the American public must be aware of this fact. He argues that democracy flourishes with truth and dies when disinformation and misinformation are allowed to run rampant. He sees the problem as disintermediation, by which he means that “sellers are linked directly to customers with no need for middlemen” [83]. Prior to the internet, newspapers and public broadcasting mediated information. They employed fact-checkers and editors, mostly constrained their bias, and adhered to journalistic norms. With the internet, mediation disappears, and information seekers are confronted with raw opinions, and what is available is influenced by money-making, biases, and agendas of all sorts, to which the information seekers may or may not be savvy. Reich says:
Reich believes that there must be some control over internet content. While some social media platforms have some policies restricting some kinds of speech on the internet, such as far-right hate speech, false coronavirus information, and speech that incites violence [97], and no political ads on Facebook the week before the election, these restrictions are not sufficient to safeguard democracy.
Sociologist Janja Lalich, who has studied cults extensively, suggests that members of “totalistic” cults—those that consider their ideology the one true path—share four key characteristics. They
She believes that followers of Trump belong to a cult.
The far longer list that Joe Navarro, former FBI agent, produced
Has a grandiose idea of who he is and what he can achieve.
Is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, or brilliance.
Demands blind, unquestioned obedience.
Requires excessive admiration from followers and outsiders.
Has a sense of entitlement—expecting to be treated as special at all times.
Is arrogant and haughty in his behavior or attitude.
Has an exaggerated sense of power entitlement that allows him to bend rules and break laws.
Is hypersensitive to how he is seen or perceived by others.
Publicly devalues others as being inferior, incapable, or not worthy.
Is frequently boastful of accomplishments.
Behaves as though people are objects to be used, manipulated, or exploited for personal gain.
When criticized, he tends to lash out not just with anger but with rage.
Anyone who criticizes or questions him is called an “enemy.”
Has “magical” answers or solutions to problems.
Habitually puts down others as inferior; only he is superior.
Treats others with contempt and arrogance.
Is constantly assessing people to determine those who are a threat or those who revere him.
Hates to be embarrassed or fail publicly; when he does, he acts out with rage.
Doesn’t seem to feel guilty for anything he has done wrong nor does he apologize for his actions.
Believes he possesses the answers and solutions to world problems ([99], reordered by author).
In
Amy Penn [100] argues that due to the cult-like nature of his presidency, Trump is conditioning his supporters to take up arms if he loses reelection. Bandy Lee, a psychiatrist who studied at Yale Medical School makes the same argument in a statement reported to a Salon reporter:
If Trump supporters are willing to have their grandparents sacrifice themselves for the economy [102], they should be more than willing to die for the rightful president in a rigged election. While Lee attributes the resistance of Trump supporters to facing reality to a refusal to admit their mistakes, I would argue this is too simple. It more likely has to do with the failure of their lives, their refusal to admit that they are the source of their own failures. It is their failure to make difficult choices and to accept responsibility for their own actions and their life. Trump gave them permission to publicly externalize their failures onto other people (like immigrants and the coastal elites) and external events (like poor border walls), to embrace their victimhood, just as Trump extols his. They are his cult followers and active agents for his deceit and disinformation.
In addition to the corruption of
What makes Trump as a cult figure both problematic and perhaps also attractive to his cult is that he has a disturbing psychological profile. Psychologist John Gartner argues that Trump has at least three personality disorders: narcissistic personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and paranoid personality disorder [103]. Bandy X. Lee’s edited volume,
Because of this character deficiency, he has no inner story or evolving story, and he cannot learn lessons from his past or reorient his course for the future.
He did not do so, because he could not. In the 2020 Republican National Convention, his handlers had to construct an inner narrative for him, and it was mostly projected by his children, Ivanka, Donald Jr., and Eric. Others were instructed to humanize him: Trump’s Twitter-man-slash-golf-caddy Dan Scavino said he was “a kind and decent man who shows endless kindness to everyone he meets.” RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel observed that there are “private moments where he comforts people in times of pain and sadness.” And Kellyanne Conway assured that when the president meets people in need he is “comforting and encouraging…assuring them that they matter.” There is little evidence to confirm such stories [106].
McAdams calls Trump a “truly authentic fake” [105], p. 169, all surface with no depth. Perhaps because of this he captivates his supporters who can pour their hopes and imaginary stories into him, because there is nothing there than can contradict them.
There are little rational grounds for supporting Trump. Nicholas Kristof, in an assessment in the
The engaging, enraging emotional triggers may vary among individuals or groups, just as the motivations of Trump supporters vary along a wide range: at the top there is likely more “motivated reasoning,” an attempt to rationalize acceptance of all things Trump in the interests in power, wealth, privilege or ideology. At the bottom are those who are addicted to their anger and resentments, their loss of privilege, their presumed displacement in society, and/or other antagonisms. All sorts of narratives can fuel their emotional state. Examples include the claim that the liberals are going to take away one’s guns if they get into power, jobs are being taken by immigrants or sent abroad, one is being persecuted for being Christian, many people get free money from the government while you work hard for yours, and so forth. These narratives are stoked and restoked by daily examples dredged from the news and sometimes from dubious internet sources, such as alt-right sites. They can be distortions of events, such as claiming that there were no peaceful protesters in Portland, only rioters. They are repeated over and over again from the same sources and different sources. Repeating information, true or not, increases its believability, and this applies to newspaper headlines, statements, or speeches [107]. They are repeated and echoed throughout the disinformation-misinformation ecology—from
This condition of embracing and seeking self-serving tropes and narratives is similar to a perversion of what is presented in Søren Kierkegaard’s notion of the demands of faith. In
Privately
In sum,
Plato would not have expected Trump supporters’ resolution to return to the Cave, where they now shout obscenities at those who want to move them out of the Cave (e.g., at the local stores, they berate clerks on their insisting they wear a mask as part of the store’s policy in coping with the pandemic, or they attack Black Americans as if they were all going to attack them). We now have segments of extreme right partisans that choose to abide in their self-righteousness and non-negotiable postures, where every affront becomes a culture war, and any cause that disturbs them is inflamed into a righteous political act. Rather than a Socrates leading them out of the Cave,
We have entered a brave new world, where, as Alice in
The separation processes of oil emulsions are an important stage for the preparation and purification of crude oil from water, mineral salts and various related impurities, asphalt-resinous substances, and paraffins contained in oil. The processes of separation of oil emulsions, the purpose of which is to completely reduce their aggregative and kinetic stability, are carried out in various ways: in gravitational (settling systems and other modifications); in centrifugal, electric, and magnetic fields [1, 2, 3, 4]; as well as using filtering through solid and liquid layers, using microwave and membrane technology [5, 6].
Oil emulsions contain water droplets of a sufficiently large size, in connection with which, in most practical applications, high-capacity separation processes use settling systems, and at small sizes and droplet concentrations, using a constant electric field and membrane technologies or combined methods to achieve high degree of purification.
Experimental and theoretical studies indicate a very complex, in disperse composition (separation) and in the flowing physical phenomena (coalescence, deformation, crushing), the structure of the intermediate layer. Many works have been devoted to theoretical and experimental studies of the mechanism of the formation of stabilization and destruction of oil emulsions as heterogeneous media [2, 4]; although many problems associated with the phenomena occur at the oil–water interface, the coalescence and fragmentation of water droplets, separation, and deposition have not been resolved correctly. Oil emulsions are polydisperse media with droplet sizes of 1–150 microns, although coarse (150–1000 microns) and colloidal (0.001–1 microns) particles are found in them. Such a size dispersion has a significant effect on the mechanism of structure formation, structural destruction, separation, and precipitation of droplets in oil emulsions. The mechanism of destruction and coalescence of droplets in oil emulsions can be divided into the following stages [7, 8]:
Convergence and collision of droplets of different sizes with the formation of an interfacial film. It should be noted that droplet transfer in a polydisperse medium is determined mainly by hydrodynamic conditions and flow turbulence. Under conditions of isotropic turbulence, the collision frequency of droplets depends on the specific dissipation of the energy of the turbulent flow and the properties of the medium and the dispersed phase [9, 10, 11, 12]. As a result of the collision and fixation of two drops with sizes
where
The deformation and destruction of adsorption shells at the oil–water interface in the flow volume at certain temperatures (60–70
Thinning and rupture of the interfacial film, followed by coalescence and coarsening of the droplets. The rupture of the interfacial film contributes to the coalescence of smaller droplets into larger ones. It is important to note that as a result of the transport of the oil emulsion in the pipes, the droplet crushing rate is much higher than the coalescence rate, as a result of which the oil emulsion is characterized by a large dispersion of droplet size and polydispersity of the medium.
Precipitation of droplets and separation of the dispersed phase as a continuous phase (separation).
An equally important factor affecting the efficiency of separation of oil emulsions is the conditions of thinning, tearing of the interfacial film [7], and the coalescence rate associated with the destruction of the adsorbed film on the surface of the droplets with the participation of demulsifiers.
The rheology of oil emulsions is associated with the presence of coagulation phenomena of dispersed particles in the presence of asphalt-resinous substances, accompanied in most cases by structure formation. The rheological properties of oil emulsions largely depend on the state of aggregation (solid phase, droplets, gas bubbles) and the properties of the dispersion medium. However, the presence of a dispersed phase can significantly change these properties under the influence of adhesion forces between particles of a dispersed phase and their interaction with a dispersion medium. In free-dispersed systems, particles of a dispersed phase are not interconnected and are able to independently move in a dispersion medium. In connected dispersed systems, particles of the dispersed phase form continuous spatial networks (structures); they lose their ability to transitional movement, maintaining only oscillatory movements. Unstable disperse systems provide structure formation in the system, up to the formation of aggregates and a skeleton, which can negatively affect the structural state (viscosity, fluidity), changing rheological properties, as well as to obtain precipitation during phase separation, treatment of industrial emissions, wastewater, etc. Aggregate stability characterizes the ability of a dispersed system to maintain a uniform distribution of particles of a dispersed phase over the volume of a dispersed medium without their interaction, providing conditions for the stability of the medium to phase separation. The loss of aggregative stability in concentrated emulsions is associated with coagulation of particles and their enlargement and can manifest itself in the formation of a bulk structure in which the dispersion medium is evenly distributed, thereby changing the rheological properties of the medium. The aggregate stability of dispersed systems with respect to coagulation is determined by the coagulation rate, which, in addition to the intensity of Brownian and hydrodynamic motion and the number of collisions, depends on the properties of the surface layers surrounding the particles. A deeper coagulation process leads to the destruction of the interlayers of the medium and direct contact of the particles, resulting in the formation of rigid coagulation structures and aggregates of particles, or their complete merging in the case of a liquid and gaseous dispersed phase (coalescence) (Figure 1).
Scheme of coagulation and formation of aggregates of particles of various structures.
The formation of coagulation structures and aggregates in the flow volume significantly affects the physical properties of oil emulsions associated with a sharp increase in the structural viscosity of the medium.
Based on this, the aim of this work is to study (a) the phenomena of coalescence, deformation, and crushing of droplets in a turbulent flow and the formation of coagulation structures associated with this; (b) the effect of asphalt-resinous substances on the formation of adsorption films and the structural viscosity of emulsions; (c) issues related to thinning and tearing of an interfacial film; and (d) the evolution of the droplet size and time distribution functions, taking into account coalescence and fragmentation of the droplets.
The structural and mechanical stability of emulsion systems is associated with the formation of adsorption layers at the oil–water interface, the composition of which consists of asphaltenes, resins, paraffins, mineral salts, and solid particles, i.e., natural surfactants [1, 2, 3, 4]. It has been established that metal-paraffin complexes lead to the formation of the shell itself and solid particles (sand, clay, limestone, etc.) contribute to increasing the strength of the shells [3, 4]. An analysis of the composition of these shells on the surface of water droplets of crude oil of various fields shows that the main stabilizers are asphaltenes and resins, which include high-melting paraffins and inorganic mechanical impurities. The structure, composition, and physicochemical properties of asphaltenes, which are very complex compounds, are given in [14, 15, 16, 17]. The formation of an adsorption layer on the surface of water droplets with elastic and viscous properties contributes to the stabilization of oil emulsions.
Consequently, the stability of oil emulsions is the result of a physical barrier that prevents tearing of the film when the collision energy between the droplets is insufficient to destroy the adsorption layer. The mechanism of the formation of adsorption films on the surface is determined by the following stages:
Diffusive mass transfer of the substance (asphaltenes) from the volume of oil to the surface of water droplets. In [18], the mass flow to the surface of a moving drop per unit time for small numbers
where
where
Adsorption of the substance on the surface of the droplets.
Desorption and destruction of the adsorption layer with the participation of surface-active substances (surfactants). If the rate of adsorption and desorption is low compared to the rate of supply of the substance to the surface of the droplet, the process of formation of the adsorption layer is limited by the processes of adsorption and desorption. Assume that the concentration of adsorbed matter in the volume
where
Dependence of the concentration of adsorbed matter on the surface on the concentration of asphaltenes (points—experiment [
To destroy the adsorption films in the flow volume, various demulsifiers (SAS) are used, which are characterized by high surface activity during adsorption. The mechanism of destruction of adsorption films consists in the diffusion transfer of the demulsifier to the film surface, with further adsorption and penetration of the film into its volume, the formation of defects and cracks in its structure, a change in surface tension, and a decrease in strength properties, which qualitatively changes the rheological properties of the films at the oil-gas interface water. Further separation of oil emulsions is determined by the frequency of droplet collisions, their fixation on the surface, thinning, and rupture of the interfacial film.
When fixing two drops as a result of their collision, the resulting interfacial film under the action of various kinds of forces is thinned to a certain critical thickness and breaks with the further merging of two drops. Assuming that in a flat film of circular cross section the laminar flow, the momentum transfer equation in cylindrical coordinates is written in the form [7, 8].
where
The last condition determines the presence of convective flow in the film according to the Marangoni effect [20, 21, 22]. The Marangoni effect can be considered as a thermocapillary flow due to a change in the temperature in the film and a convective flow due to a change in the concentration of the demulsifier and surface tension. Then differentiating (7) with respect to
and substituting into Eq. (6), we obtain
Integrating Eq. (10) twice and using boundary conditions (9), we obtain
Solving Eq. (8), taking into account (11), and provided that the value is negligible, we obtain
It should be noted that in [19] this equation was proposed in a slightly different form, not taking into account the distribution of pressure and surface tension depending on the angle
Integrating Eq. (13) twice, provided that
where
Putting that
Putting
For
Given the foregoing, the equation of thinning of the interfacial film (17) can be represented as
where
where
For thin films, we can put that
where
where
where
For thick films, we can put that
If
The above solutions (20)–(24) can be used in practical calculations of the thickness of the interfacial film for special cases. As follows from Eq. (20), the Marangoni effect is a partial correction to the surface tension coefficient in the coefficient
It should be noted that various chemical reagents and demulsifiers significantly reduce the surface tension of the film and significantly increase the rate of thinning of the interfacial film (Figure 3).
Change in the thickness of the interfacial film for various concentrations of demulsifier (g/l): 1, 0.02; 2, 0.01; 3, 0.005; 4, 0.002.
Figure 4 shows a comparison of experimental and calculated values according to Eq. (17) for thinning the film thickness, and after reaching the critical value thickness
Comparison of the calculated
The processes of coalescence and fragmentation of droplets are reversible phenomena and can be described by similar equations.
The crushing of droplets and bubbles in an isotropic turbulent flow is an important factor for increasing the interfacial surface and the rate of heat and mass transfer in dispersed systems. The crushing mechanism of deformable particles is determined by many factors, among which it is important to note the following:
The effect of turbulent pulsations of a certain frequency on the surface of droplets and bubbles on the change in shape.
Boundary instability on the surface of the droplet, determined by the turbulization of the boundary layer or general instability as a result of reaching the droplet size maximum value
The influence of the external environment, in which the droplet crushing is defined as the equilibrium between the external forces from the continuous phase (dynamic pressure) and the surface tension forces that resist the destruction of the droplet. It should be noted that this condition can also characterize the deformation of the shape of drops and bubbles.
As a result of mutual elastic collision with intensive mixing of the system. It is important to note that not every collision of droplets and bubbles leads to their coalescence and coalescence, and during an elastic collision, a droplet can decay into fragments, thereby changing the size distribution spectrum, although there is no work indicating the number of particles formed as a result of such decay.
A general review of the fragmentation of droplets and bubbles is given in the work [26], where issues related to the frequency of crushing and the nature of the particle size distribution function are considered, although the analysis of the maximum and minimum sizes and the characteristic features of the effect of secondary crushing processes on the change in the function of the multimodal distribution of drops are not considered. Despite the many mechanisms for crushing droplets and bubbles, an important parameter characterizing this process is the frequency of crushing in a turbulent flow, the definition of which has been the subject of many works. It should be noted that the mechanisms of coalescence and fragmentation of droplets are similar and differ only in the dependence of energy dissipation on the number of particles. Based on the analysis of surface energy and kinetic energy of a turbulent flow, the following expression is proposed for the droplet crushing frequency [26]:
In an isotropic turbulent flow, coalescence and fragmentation of droplets are determined by their turbulent diffusion, represented as [18, 27].
The process of coalescence and crushing can be considered as a mass transfer process, in connection with which, the change in the number of particles taking into account the diffusion coefficients at
The general solution of this boundary value problem under certain assumptions will be presented as
The frequency of coalescence and crushing is defined as
We introduce the relaxation time for the coalescence of droplets in a turbulent flow in the form
Then the coalescence frequency is defined as
Thus, if
Similarly, it is possible to determine the frequency of coalescence and crushing at
As follows from this equation, the frequency of fragmentation of droplets and bubbles in a viscous region or in a liquid medium is inversely proportional to the viscosity of the medium ∼
or for a viscous flow
With an increase in the concentration of the dispersed phase, particle collisions occur, accompanied by the phenomena of coagulation, crushing, and the formation of coagulation structures in the form of a continuous loose network of interconnected particles. With an increase in particle concentration, the effective viscosity increases linearly if the particles of the dispersed phase are distant from each other at sufficiently large distances that exclude intermolecular interaction and are rigid undeformable balls.
In a number of works, depending on the crushing mechanism, the following formulas are proposed for the crushing frequency [28, 29, 30, 31, 32]:
The last equation determines the frequency of droplet crushing in the mixing devices and depends on the mixing parameters [20, 33]. For multiphase systems with a volume fraction of droplets
The crushing rate of droplets in an isotropic turbulent flow is characterized by the crushing rate constant, defined as
In principle, the expression given in brackets characterizes the ratio of surface energy
Analyzing Eqs. (29)–(31), it can be noted that the crushing frequency in an isotropic turbulent flow for a region
Due to convective Brownian diffusion of the finely dispersed component of particles, which is characteristic mainly for laminar flow at low Reynolds numbers.
Due to turbulent flow and turbulent diffusion
Due to additional external fields (gravitational, electric, electromagnetic, etc.). If the Kolmogorov turbulence scale
Due to the effect of engagement as a result of convective transfer of small particles in the vicinity of the incident large particle. As a result of the deposition or ascent of large particles, due to the formation of a hydrodynamic wake, the capture of small particles by large particles significantly increases, which leads to gravitational coalescence if they fall along lines close to the center line. For the processes of droplet coalescence, the capture coefficient plays an important role, which determines the deviation of the real particle capture cross section from the geometric
where
The capture coefficient is defined as
Here
Due to the heterogeneity of the temperature and pressure fields, which contribute to the appearance of forces proportional to the temperature and pressure gradients and acting in the direction of decreasing these parameters. As a result of the action of these forces, the finely dispersed component of the dispersed flow is characterized by their migration due to thermal diffusion and barodiffusion, which also contributes to their collision and coalescence.
In addition to the indicated phenomena, physical phenomena (droplet evaporation, condensation) contribute to coalescence, accompanied by the emergence of a hydrodynamic repulsive force (Fassi effect) of the evaporating droplets due to evaporation (Stefan flow) or when the droplet condenses by the appearance of a force acting in the opposite direction. For an inviscid flow and a fast droplet coalescence rate
or for a viscous flow
where
As follows from this expression, the collision frequency of particles is inversely proportional to their size
where
By introducing the Peclet number for isotropic turbulence in the form
Thus, with an increase in the number
Coalescence of droplets and bubbles is characterized by the following stages: rapprochement and collision of droplets of different sizes in a turbulent flow with the formation of an interfacial film between them. It should be noted that the transfer of droplets in a polydisperse medium is mainly determined by the hydrodynamic conditions and the intensity of the flow turbulence. Under conditions of isotropic turbulence, the collision frequency of droplets depends on the specific dissipation of the energy of the turbulent flow and the properties of the medium and the dispersed phase.
The deformation of droplets and bubbles, first of all, is characterized by a violation of the balance of external and surface stresses acting on the droplet in a turbulent flow. In the simplest case, with insignificance of gravitational and resistance forces, such forces are hydrodynamic head and surface tension. The pressure forces are proportional to the velocity head
Schematic representation of the deformation of a drop to an ellipsoidal shape.
The volumetric deformation of droplets and bubbles is based on a three-dimensional model and results in a change in the shape of a spherical particle to an ellipsoidal one. Moreover, the drop is subjected to simultaneous stretching and compression with a constant volume. In the literature there are a large number of empirical formulas describing the deformation of drops and bubbles. Compared to multidimensional deformation, volumetric deformation is the simplest case with the preservation of a certain shape symmetry (Figure 6).
The characteristic forms of deformation of a spherical drop and bubble.
It is important to note that for any deformation of the droplet shape, the surface area of the particle increases with a constant volume of liquid in the droplet, which is an important factor in increasing the interfacial surface.
In [8, 18], the fluctuation frequency of oscillations of the droplet surface using the Rayleigh equation as a result of the influence of turbulent pulsations of a certain frequency on the surface of droplets and bubbles on the shape change is defined as
where is
where
Expression (49) for small numbers Re
where
As a parameter characterizing the deformation of droplets and bubbles, we consider the ratio of the minor axis of the ellipsoid
Then, putting that
where
where
Dependence of the degree of deformation on the number for various numbers equal to 1, 7; 2, 1.4; 3, 0.023; 4, 0.0001.
As follows from Figure 8, expression (53) satisfactorily describes the deformation of droplets and bubbles for the region of variation
Comparison of the deformation model
Considering only the first term of expression (53) and setting that
If
and if
Here
In [34], this model was used to study the deformation of drops, and a comparison is made with other existing models, the results of which are shown in Figure 8.
The authors of [34] note that model (56) is the best compared to existing models.
The structural viscosity of a dispersed medium associated with the content of the dispersed phase, as well as with various physical phenomena of interaction between particles, varies from the molecular viscosity of a Newtonian fluid in the absence of dispersed particles
One of the important rheological parameters of emulsions is their dynamic viscosity, which depends on the volume fraction, size, and shape of the droplets, on the ratio of the viscosity of the droplets to the viscosity of the medium
No. | Formulas for viscosity | Links |
---|---|---|
1 | Einstein’s formula | |
2 | [35] | |
3 | [36] | |
4 | [37] | |
5 | [38] | |
6 | [38] | |
7 | [38] | |
8 | [38] | |
9 | [39] | |
10 | [39] |
Empirical formulas for calculating the effective dynamic viscosity of disperse systems.
A large number of empirical formulas for calculating the viscosity of dispersed media are given in the work [40, 41]. At high concentrations of particles in the volume, taking into account the hydrodynamic interaction of particles, some authors use a modification of the Einstein equation
where
As a semiempirical expression for calculating the effective viscosity of suspensions, which describes the experimental data well over a wide range of particle concentrations, the Moony formula [7, 8] can be noted
where
where
For the effective viscosity of a disperse system,
where
This formula was tested for various liquid–liquid systems and gave the most effective result with a relative error of up to 20%. Many models express the dependence of the viscosity of a disperse system on the limiting concentration of particles
In the literature you can find many other rheological models, using which you can give various dependencies to determine the viscosity of the system [7, 8].
Here
The empirical models presented are used for specific applications and represent formulas for adequate approximation of experimental data, although we note that attempts to find a general rheological equation for different systems are considered impossible in advance. It is important to note that effective viscosity also depends on particle sizes. However, if we assume that the volume fraction of particles per unit volume is equal to
The dependence of the effective viscosity of suspensions on the fraction of particles and their sizes: 1, 90–105 μm; 2, 45–80 μm; 3, 30–40 μm.
For small particle sizes, the dependence of effective viscosity on particle sizes becomes more noticeable, where the dependence of viscosity on particle sizes is described by the expression
The correspondence of this dependence to experimental data is shown in Figure 10.
The calculated (solid curves) experimental (points) of the relative viscosity of the dispersed system from the volume fraction of solid spherical particles and their sizes: 1,
As follows from the experimental data and from this formula, the effective viscosity of a dispersed system substantially depends on the volume fraction and particle size. Moreover, with increasing particle size, the effective viscosity also increases. In all likelihood, in this case, coagulation structures and aggregates are not formed, but a simple dense packing of particles is formed.
The effective viscosity of the disperse system grows up to a critical value, which affects the speed and nature of the flow (Figure 10). Coagulation structures are formed due to intermolecular bonds between particles, and if liquid interlayers remain between the particles, then the thickness of this interlayer significantly affects the strength of the coagulation structure. The change in the effective viscosity of non-Newtonian oil from the pressure gradient, accompanied by the formation and destruction of the structure due to particles of asphaltenes, based on experimental data, is determined by the empirical formula [8, 42].
where
The dependence of the viscosity of the structured system on the nature of its destruction at various values of the pressure gradient.
The viscosity of disperse systems also depends on the size and deformation of the particle shape, and with increasing size, the viscosity increases. Despite the large number and variety of viscosity models of disperse systems, the main studies are devoted to the construction of empirical models without taking into account the mechanism of phenomena that describe experimental data with a certain accuracy. The nature and properties of coagulation structures significantly affect the basic properties of a dispersed medium. It is very difficult to determine the viscosity of composite materials, where the formation of certain structures is an important and necessary problem, where the viscosity depends on the concentration of the components included in this system, molecular weight, temperature, and many other parameters.
The viscosity of free-dispersed systems increases with increasing concentration of the dispersed phase. The presence of particles of the dispersed phase leads to a distortion of the fluid flow near these particles, which affects the viscosity of the dispersed system. If the concentration is negligible, then the collision of the particles is excluded, and the nature of the fluid motion near one of the particles will affect the fluid motion near the others.
The work [43] provides a formula for calculating the viscosity of an oil emulsion for its various types
The dependence of the viscosity of the oil emulsion on the water content: (1) highly concentrated emulsions, b = 7.3; (2) concentrated emulsions, b = 5.5; (3) for average emulsion concentrations, b = 4.5; (4) for diluted emulsions, b = 3.8; (5) for highly diluted emulsions, b = 3.0.
It is important to note that, in addition to the above factors, the viscosity of emulsions is associated with the presence of deformable drops and bubbles in them, and at high concentrations of drops with the formation of coagulation structures (flocculus), leading to rheological properties. The work [44] considers possible options for calculating the viscosity of emulsions taking into account structural changes. If we introduce the stress relaxation time in the form
then the viscosity of the emulsions can be calculated by the formula
Here
and, when
Spatial interpretation of the nature of the change in viscosity of emulsions at
Here
An experimental study of the effect of the content of asphaltenes and resins in oil on its rheological properties and viscosity was proposed in [46, 47, 48].
Using the results of these studies, it can be noted that the presence of asphaltenes, resins, and paraffins in oil, which change the properties of oil, significantly affects their movement and transport. First of all, this affects the stress and shear rate and the increase in viscosity of non-Newtonian oil. In Figure 14, the dependence of the effective viscosity of Iranian oil on shear rate by various rheological models is proposed [47].
Approximation of the dependence of viscosity on shear rate by various rheological models: (1) Casson model,
The table below shows the values of the main coefficients included in these rheological models at various temperatures [47] (Table 2).
Temperature | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
25°C | 45°C | 60°C | |||||||
Model | |||||||||
Casson | 8.13 | 4.11 | – | 0.57 | 2.2 | – | 0.15 | 1.53 | – |
Power law | – | 54.65 | 0.77 | – | 9.26 | 0.88 | – | 3.86 | 0.9 |
Bingham | 61 | 17.23 | – | 8.66 | 4.81 | – | 3.13 | 2.33 | – |
Coefficients of rheological models at
Of all the models, a satisfactory approximation to the experimental data gives the expression (
Given this expression, a rheological dependence satisfying the experimental data can be represented as
The dependence of the coefficient of consistency on temperature can be expressed by the following equation:
Figure 15 shows the dependence of the coefficient of consistency on temperature.
The dependence of the coefficient of consistency on temperature.
The dependence of oil viscosity on the content of asphaltenes (% wt.) in oil using experimental data is expressed by the formula (Figure 16)
Dependence of oil viscosity on the content of asphaltenes in it at temperatures: 1–25°C (
Provided that
In [49], similar studies were conducted for West Siberian oils for the concentration of asphaltenes in oil from 4 to 72% (mass.). This work presents experimental studies of the effective viscosity of non-Newtonian oil as a function of asphaltene content at various temperatures (Figure 17). As follows from Figure 17, the region of transition from Newtonian to non-Newtonian properties with an increase in the content of asphalt-resinous substances
Characteristic stages of structure formation in oil depending on the content of asphaltenes: I, dispersed oil; II, area of formation of structures; III, structured oil system, 1, viscosity; 2, fluidity.
As follows from Figure 17, as the structure formation and the concentration of asphaltenes increase, the mobility or fluidity of the oil system decreases, and the fluidity of the system is defined as
Figure 18 shows the experimental data on the change in viscosity of West Siberian oil depending on the asphaltene content [4].
The dependence of the effective viscosity on the content of the dispersed phase of tar-asphaltene at temperatures: 1–84°C; 2–112°C; 3–144°C. (
The equation describing the experimental data on the viscosity of oil in large intervals of changes in the content of asphaltenes is presented in the form
Here
and
The value of the delta function characterizes the viscosity jump in the region of structure formation. In particular, the main property of the delta function is as follows
The expression of the partial approximation of the delta function can be represented
Here
Delta functions: 1 and 2, positive values of the function
Thus, the use of the delta function allows one to describe all the spasmodic phenomena occurring during the formation and destruction of structures in non-Newtonian oil. At the same time, satisfactory results are obtained by using an exponential function of a higher order, which allows one to obtain a smoothing effect in the region of the jump.
The use of aromatic and other solvents partially dissolves asphaltenes, thereby reducing or eliminating the formation of coagulation structures, which improves the rheological properties of dispersed petroleum media. As follows from Figure 18, for a given oil, if the asphaltene content is less, the formation of coagulation structures is excluded, although there may be other conditions for different oil fields. An analysis of various studies on the influence of asphalt-resinous substances on the rheology of non-Newtonian oil of various fields leads to conflicting results, although in all cases there is an increase in viscosity as a result of structure formation. It should be noted that in addition to asphaltenes, the rheological properties of the oil disperse system are affected by the content of water and solid phase in it.
Coalescence and fragmentation of droplets significantly change the dispersion of oil emulsions, which is characterized by the evolution of the probability distribution function over time and size, described by the Boltzmann kinetic equation and the stochastic Fokker-Planck Equation [7, 8, 49, 50]. Changing the size and shape of water droplets in an oil emulsion as a result of their coalescence, deformation, and crushing significantly affects the rheological parameters, in particular, the effective viscosity of the emulsion. Coalescence and crushing of water droplets in emulsions can occur simultaneously. Then the rate of change in the number and size of particles per unit volume is determined by the rates of their coalescence and crushing
where
During slow coagulation of solid particles, it is important to construct the evolution of the distribution function over the residence time and size, which gives a complete picture of the change in the number and size of particles over time. In [1, 2], the Fokker-Plank equation is used to construct the evolution of the particle distribution function. The stochastic Fokker-Planck equation describes disperse systems with a continuous change in the properties of the medium and the size of dispersed inclusions. Although the processes of coalescence and fragmentation are characterized by an abrupt change in the properties of particles (sizes), in principle, for a sufficiently long period of time, a change in the average properties can be assumed to be quasicontinuous with an infinitely small jump. In particular, it can be assumed that the average size of droplets and bubbles varies continuously over time and obeys the equation of the change in the average particle mass over time:
Many experimental studies on the fragmentation and coagulation of particles in a turbulent flow show that the average particle size is set at the minimum or maximum level, which corresponds to the aggregative stability of a dispersed medium. Given the above, in Eq. (81) should be considered as the reduced mass relative to the extreme values of the particles, i.e.,
being a time-continuous process where
Thus, considering the change in particle size as a continuous function, the Fokker-Planck equation in the simplest case, taking into account (82), can be written as [8, 49, 50].
where
The solution to this equation presents great difficulties associated with specifying the form of the function
The solution of Eq. (83) by the method of separation of variables will be presented in the form
where
Solutions (84) and (85) characterize the evolution of the probability density distribution function of droplets in size and in time. The asymptotic value of the distribution for i
Having introduced some simplifications taking into account the initial distribution in the form of a lognormal function
where
Figure 20 shows the evolution of the distribution function of the fragmentation of a non-Newtonian viscoelastic drop (oil) in an aqueous medium.
The characteristic distribution of the distribution function during crushing drops in size and time equal to 1, 10 min., and 2, 20 minutes.
The spectrum of large and small droplets is practically shifted relatively to each other [8, 49] (Figure 20).
It is important to note that the fluctuation of the distribution function on the left side of the curve indicates secondary, tertiary, etc. the nature of droplet crushing, and on the right side - about their multiple coalescence. However, after some time, when the resources of the large-droplet or small-droplet spectrum are exhausted, the spectrum begins to behave like a single-humped one. In practice, the behavior of multi-hump distributions in the model representation is confirmed when the distribution is represented by the sum of two or more distribution functions. The character of the evolution of the distribution function and the change in the coefficient of turbulent diffusion can also be significantly affected by the deposition of particles from the turbulent flow. The distribution spectrum varies significantly with a change in the droplet deposition rate. In conclusion, we note that the phenomena of coalescence and fragmentation of droplets are spasmodic. In the case of small jumps, such processes are satisfactorily described by the Fokker-Planck equation. Obviously, jumps should become smaller and more likely, so the diffusion process can always be approximated by a jump process, but not vice versa.
The content in the composition of crude oil of various particles of the dispersed phase significantly affects the rheological parameters of the liquid. The main phenomena in the processes of coalescence of water droplets in oil emulsions are the destruction of the adsorption film on the surface due to asphalt-resinous substances, the thinning and rupture of the interfacial film between the droplets, and the coalescence of droplets.
The formation and formation of the adsorption layer is described by Eq. (5), a comparison of which with experimental data gives satisfactory results. The equation for estimating the thickness of the adsorption layer is given in (4). To study the thinning of the interfacial film, Eqs. (17) and (18) are derived that take into account the presence of dynamic, capillary, proppant pressure and the Marangoni effect. Particular cases of solving proposed Eqs. (20)–(24) are presented. Comparison with the experimental data on the thinning of the interfacial film [38] for West Siberian oils (Figure 5) showed that for large values of the film thickness, Eq. (20) with coefficients equal to
0.14 | 0.235 | 0.265 | 0.30 |
The dependence of the coefficient
For very thin films
After reaching the critical value of the thickness
The presence of two-dimensional pressures and the complexity of its distribution on the film surface, taking into account Eq. (14), show that, when it is thinned, the presence of the Marangoni effect to some extent helps to stabilize oil emulsions, i.e., has an inhibitory effect on tearing the film. As follows from Eq. (20) and the formula for determining the coefficient, the Marangoni effect contributes to the temporary stabilization of the interfacial film, since at any point where the film becomes thinner due to the influence of external forces, a local increase in surface tension occurs, which counteracts the thinning. The process of thinning and rupture of the film is random (spontaneous) in nature, and the probability of its rupture is inversely proportional to its thickness.
The main physical phenomena that occur in oil emulsions are the coalescence of droplets in the presence of asphalt-resinous substances in the oil, leading to structure formation. An analytical solution of the equation of diffusion transfer of droplets in an isotropic turbulent flow determines the coalescence and fragmentation frequencies of droplets (29–31).
The paper proposes many expressions for determining the structural viscosity of oil from the content of water droplets, as well as the empirical or semiempirical dependences of the oil viscosity on the content of asphalt-resinous substances (73) for Iranian oil and (81) for West Siberian oil. Theoretical and experimental studies have shown that the value of the structural viscosity of oil during structure formation sharply increases, and when the structure is destroyed, it sharply decreases (Figure 11).
Based on the Fokker-Planck equation, the evolution of the distribution function of water droplets in an oil emulsion as a function of size and time is studied (84) and (85).
The intensification of the processes of flow and separation of oil emulsions is associated primarily with the rheological properties of the oil emulsion and turbulization of the flow. High-frequency turbulent pulsations contribute to the mechanical weakening of the adsorption and interfacial film and intermolecular bonds between its components, a decrease in the strength and destruction of the film as a result of their deformation (tension, compression), and improvement of the conditions of mutual effective collision (increase in the collision frequency) and coalescence.
This work was supported by the Science Foundation of «SOCAR» under the grant project 04LR - AMEA (10/09/2019) at the Institute of Catalysis and Inorganic Chemistry named after Acad. M.F.Nagiyev.
van der Waals-Hamaker constant; coefficients in Eq. (18) diameter of drops concentration heat capacity molecular diffusion coefficient droplet diffusion coefficient pipe diameter resistance coefficient in pipes the force acting on the interfacial film hypergeometric function height of the intermediate layer acceleration of gravity mass flow to the surface of a drop per unit time size distribution function of the probability of droplets interfacial film radius drop radius pressure temperature particle velocity flow rate in the film flow rate mean square velocity time the concentration of adsorbed matter film thickness shear rate initial film thickness the thickness of the adsorbed layer the porosity of the intermediate layer specific energy dissipation kinematic viscosity of the medium film viscosity dynamic viscosity of the medium dynamic viscosity of a drop effective viscosity of emulsions coefficient of thermal conductivity the degree of entrainment of drops by a pulsating medium eigenvalues surface tension proppant pressure medium density droplet density relaxation time shear stress volume fraction of droplets in the stream collision frequency Morton’s number Peclet number Reynolds number the Weber number initial conditions particle medium
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His studies in robotics lead him not only to a PhD degree but also inspired him to co-found and build the International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems - world's first Open Access journal in the field of robotics.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"TU Wien",country:{name:"Austria"}}},{id:"441",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Jaekyu",middleName:null,surname:"Park",slug:"jaekyu-park",fullName:"Jaekyu Park",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/441/images/1881_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"LG Corporation (South Korea)",country:{name:"Korea, South"}}},{id:"465",title:"Dr",name:"Christian",middleName:null,surname:"Martens",slug:"christian-martens",fullName:"Christian Martens",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"479",title:"Dr.",name:"Valentina",middleName:null,surname:"Colla",slug:"valentina-colla",fullName:"Valentina Colla",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/479/images/358_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies",country:{name:"Italy"}}},{id:"494",title:"PhD",name:"Loris",middleName:null,surname:"Nanni",slug:"loris-nanni",fullName:"Loris Nanni",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/494/images/system/494.jpg",biography:"Loris Nanni received his Master Degree cum laude on June-2002 from the University of Bologna, and the April 26th 2006 he received his Ph.D. in Computer Engineering at DEIS, University of Bologna. On September, 29th 2006 he has won a post PhD fellowship from the university of Bologna (from October 2006 to October 2008), at the competitive examination he was ranked first in the industrial engineering area. He extensively served as referee for several international journals. He is author/coauthor of more than 100 research papers. He has been involved in some projects supported by MURST and European Community. His research interests include pattern recognition, bioinformatics, and biometric systems (fingerprint classification and recognition, signature verification, face recognition).",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"496",title:"Dr.",name:"Carlos",middleName:null,surname:"Leon",slug:"carlos-leon",fullName:"Carlos Leon",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Seville",country:{name:"Spain"}}},{id:"512",title:"Dr.",name:"Dayang",middleName:null,surname:"Jawawi",slug:"dayang-jawawi",fullName:"Dayang Jawawi",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Technology Malaysia",country:{name:"Malaysia"}}},{id:"528",title:"Dr.",name:"Kresimir",middleName:null,surname:"Delac",slug:"kresimir-delac",fullName:"Kresimir Delac",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/528/images/system/528.jpg",biography:"K. Delac received his B.Sc.E.E. degree in 2003 and is currentlypursuing a Ph.D. degree at the University of Zagreb, Faculty of Electrical Engineering andComputing. His current research interests are digital image analysis, pattern recognition andbiometrics.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Zagreb",country:{name:"Croatia"}}},{id:"557",title:"Dr.",name:"Andon",middleName:"Venelinov",surname:"Topalov",slug:"andon-topalov",fullName:"Andon Topalov",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/557/images/1927_n.jpg",biography:"Dr. Andon V. Topalov received the MSc degree in Control Engineering from the Faculty of Information Systems, Technologies, and Automation at Moscow State University of Civil Engineering (MGGU) in 1979. He then received his PhD degree in Control Engineering from the Department of Automation and Remote Control at Moscow State Mining University (MGSU), Moscow, in 1984. From 1985 to 1986, he was a Research Fellow in the Research Institute for Electronic Equipment, ZZU AD, Plovdiv, Bulgaria. In 1986, he joined the Department of Control Systems, Technical University of Sofia at the Plovdiv campus, where he is presently a Full Professor. He has held long-term visiting Professor/Scholar positions at various institutions in South Korea, Turkey, Mexico, Greece, Belgium, UK, and Germany. And he has coauthored one book and authored or coauthored more than 80 research papers in conference proceedings and journals. His current research interests are in the fields of intelligent control and robotics.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Technical University of Sofia",country:{name:"Bulgaria"}}},{id:"585",title:"Prof.",name:"Munir",middleName:null,surname:"Merdan",slug:"munir-merdan",fullName:"Munir Merdan",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/585/images/system/585.jpg",biography:"Munir Merdan received the M.Sc. degree in mechanical engineering from the Technical University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, in 2001, and the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the Vienna University of Technology, Vienna, Austria, in 2009.Since 2005, he has been at the Automation and Control Institute, Vienna University of Technology, where he is currently a Senior Researcher. His research interests include the application of agent technology for achieving agile control in the manufacturing environment.",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"605",title:"Prof",name:"Dil",middleName:null,surname:"Hussain",slug:"dil-hussain",fullName:"Dil Hussain",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/605/images/system/605.jpg",biography:"Dr. Dil Muhammad Akbar Hussain is a professor of Electronics Engineering & Computer Science at the Department of Energy Technology, Aalborg University Denmark. Professor Akbar has a Master degree in Digital Electronics from Govt. College University, Lahore Pakistan and a P-hD degree in Control Engineering from the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, University of Sussex United Kingdom. Aalborg University has Two Satellite Campuses, one in Copenhagen (Aalborg University Copenhagen) and the other in Esbjerg (Aalborg University Esbjerg).\n· He is a member of prestigious IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), and IAENG (International Association of Engineers) organizations. \n· He is the chief Editor of the Journal of Software Engineering.\n· He is the member of the Editorial Board of International Journal of Computer Science and Software Technology (IJCSST) and International Journal of Computer Engineering and Information Technology. \n· He is also the Editor of Communication in Computer and Information Science CCIS-20 by Springer.\n· Reviewer For Many Conferences\nHe is the lead person in making collaboration agreements between Aalborg University and many universities of Pakistan, for which the MOU’s (Memorandum of Understanding) have been signed.\nProfessor Akbar is working in Academia since 1990, he started his career as a Lab demonstrator/TA at the University of Sussex. After finishing his P. hD degree in 1992, he served in the Industry as a Scientific Officer and continued his academic career as a visiting scholar for a number of educational institutions. In 1996 he joined National University of Science & Technology Pakistan (NUST) as an Associate Professor; NUST is one of the top few universities in Pakistan. In 1999 he joined an International Company Lineo Inc, Canada as Manager Compiler Group, where he headed the group for developing Compiler Tool Chain and Porting of Operating Systems for the BLACKfin processor. The processor development was a joint venture by Intel and Analog Devices. In 2002 Lineo Inc., was taken over by another company, so he joined Aalborg University Denmark as an Assistant Professor.\nProfessor Akbar has truly a multi-disciplined career and he continued his legacy and making progress in many areas of his interests both in teaching and research. 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A new type of memristors with a floating photogate based on biocompatible graphene and other 2D crystals with extremely low power consumption and footprint is considered. The photocatalytic oxidation of graphene is proposed as an effective method of creating synapse-like 2D memristive devices with photoresistive switching for nonvolatile electronic memory of ultrahigh density. 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This chapter will discuss the state-of-the-art research trend on neuromorphic computing with memristors as electronic synapses. Furthermore, a novel three-dimensional (3D) neuromorphic computing architecture combining memristor and monolithic 3D integration technology would be introduced; such computing architecture has capabilities to reduce the system power consumption, provide high connectivity, resolve the routing congestion issues, and offer the massively parallel data processing. 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His research interests involve understanding the molecular mechanisms of host defense during human viral infections and developing new predictive, preventive, and therapeutic strategies for them using Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), HIV, and emerging viruses as a model via stem cell and cell culture technologies. His research work has been published in various high-impact factor journals (Science, PNAS, Nature Medicine) with a high number of citations. He has received many awards and honors in India and abroad including various Young Scientist Awards, BBSRC India Partnering Award, and Dr. JC Bose National Award of Department of Biotechnology, Min. of Science and Technology, Govt. of India. 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She graduated from Gazi University Faculty of Dentistry, Ankara, Turkey in 2000. \r\nLater she received her Ph.D. degree from the Oral Diagnosis and Radiology Department; which was recently renamed as Oral and Dentomaxillofacial Radiology, from the same university. \r\nShe is working as a full-time Associate Professor and is a lecturer and an academic researcher. \r\nHer expertise areas are dental caries, cancer, dental fear and anxiety, gag reflex in dentistry, oral medicine, and dentomaxillofacial radiology.",institutionString:"Gazi University",institution:{name:"Gazi University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Turkey"}}}]},{type:"book",id:"7139",title:"Current Approaches in Orthodontics",subtitle:null,coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/7139.jpg",slug:"current-approaches-in-orthodontics",publishedDate:"April 10th 2019",editedByType:"Edited by",bookSignature:"Belma Işık Aslan and Fatma Deniz Uzuner",hash:"2c77384eeb748cf05a898d65b9dcb48a",volumeInSeries:2,fullTitle:"Current Approaches in Orthodontics",editors:[{id:"42847",title:"Dr.",name:"Belma",middleName:null,surname:"Işik Aslan",slug:"belma-isik-aslan",fullName:"Belma Işik Aslan",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/42847/images/system/42847.jpg",biography:"Dr. Belma IşIk Aslan was born in 1976 in Ankara-TURKEY. 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Having been personally trained by Dr. Robert Kerstein on this method, Dr. Gözler has been lecturing on the T-Scan Occlusion Analysis Method in conferences both in Turkey and abroad. Dr. Gözler has various articles and presentations on Digital Occlusion Analysis methods. 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Dr. Al Ostwani is an assistant professor and faculty member at IUST University since 2014. \nDuring his academic experience, he has received several awards including the scientific research award from the Union of Arab Universities, the Syrian gold medal and the international gold medal for invention and creativity. Dr. Al Ostwani is a Member of the International Association of Dental Traumatology and the Syrian Society for Research and Preventive Dentistry since 2017. 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He also obtained an MSc in Molecular and Genetic Medicine, and a Ph.D. in Clinical Immunology and Human Genetics from the University of Sheffield, UK. He also completed a short-term fellowship in Pediatric Clinical Immunology and Bone Marrow Transplantation at Newcastle General Hospital, England. Dr. Rezaei is a Full Professor of Immunology and Vice Dean of International Affairs and Research, at the School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, and the co-founder and head of the Research Center for Immunodeficiencies. He is also the founding president of the Universal Scientific Education and Research Network (USERN). Dr. Rezaei has directed more than 100 research projects and has designed and participated in several international collaborative projects. He is an editor, editorial assistant, or editorial board member of more than forty international journals. He has edited more than 50 international books, presented more than 500 lectures/posters in congresses/meetings, and published more than 1,100 scientific papers in international journals.",institutionString:"Tehran University of Medical Sciences",institution:{name:"Tehran University of Medical Sciences",country:{name:"Iran"}}},{id:"180733",title:"Dr.",name:"Jean",middleName:null,surname:"Engohang-Ndong",slug:"jean-engohang-ndong",fullName:"Jean Engohang-Ndong",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/180733/images/system/180733.png",biography:"Dr. Jean Engohang-Ndong was born and raised in Gabon. After obtaining his Associate Degree of Science at the University of Science and Technology of Masuku, Gabon, he continued his education in France where he obtained his BS, MS, and Ph.D. in Medical Microbiology. He worked as a post-doctoral fellow at the Public Health Research Institute (PHRI), Newark, NJ for four years before accepting a three-year faculty position at Brigham Young University-Hawaii. Dr. Engohang-Ndong is a tenured faculty member with the academic rank of Full Professor at Kent State University, Ohio, where he teaches a wide range of biological science courses and pursues his research in medical and environmental microbiology. Recently, he expanded his research interest to epidemiology and biostatistics of chronic diseases in Gabon.",institutionString:"Kent State University",institution:{name:"Kent State University",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"188773",title:"Prof.",name:"Emmanuel",middleName:null,surname:"Drouet",slug:"emmanuel-drouet",fullName:"Emmanuel Drouet",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/188773/images/system/188773.png",biography:"Emmanuel Drouet, PharmD, is a Professor of Virology at the Faculty of Pharmacy, the University Grenoble-Alpes, France. As a head scientist at the Institute of Structural Biology in Grenoble, Dr. Drouet’s research investigates persisting viruses in humans (RNA and DNA viruses) and the balance with our host immune system. He focuses on these viruses’ effects on humans (both their impact on pathology and their symbiotic relationships in humans). He has an excellent track record in the herpesvirus field, and his group is engaged in clinical research in the field of Epstein-Barr virus diseases. He is the editor of the online Encyclopedia of Environment and he coordinates the Universal Health Coverage education program for the BioHealth Computing Schools of the European Institute of Science.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Grenoble Alpes University",country:{name:"France"}}},{id:"131400",title:"Prof.",name:"Alfonso J.",middleName:null,surname:"Rodriguez-Morales",slug:"alfonso-j.-rodriguez-morales",fullName:"Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/131400/images/system/131400.png",biography:"Dr. Rodriguez-Morales is an expert in tropical and emerging diseases, particularly zoonotic and vector-borne diseases (especially arboviral diseases). He is the president of the Travel Medicine Committee of the Pan-American Infectious Diseases Association (API), as well as the president of the Colombian Association of Infectious Diseases (ACIN). He is a member of the Committee on Tropical Medicine, Zoonoses, and Travel Medicine of ACIN. He is a vice-president of the Latin American Society for Travel Medicine (SLAMVI) and a Member of the Council of the International Society for Infectious Diseases (ISID). Since 2014, he has been recognized as a Senior Researcher, at the Ministry of Science of Colombia. He is a professor at the Faculty of Medicine of the Fundacion Universitaria Autonoma de las Americas, in Pereira, Risaralda, Colombia. He is an External Professor, Master in Research on Tropical Medicine and International Health, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain. He is also a professor at the Master in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Universidad Científica del Sur, Lima, Peru. In 2021 he has been awarded the “Raul Isturiz Award” Medal of the API. Also, in 2021, he was awarded with the “Jose Felix Patiño” Asclepius Staff Medal of the Colombian Medical College, due to his scientific contributions to COVID-19 during the pandemic. He is currently the Editor in Chief of the journal Travel Medicine and Infectious Diseases. His Scopus H index is 47 (Google Scholar H index, 68).",institutionString:"Institución Universitaria Visión de las Américas, Colombia",institution:null},{id:"332819",title:"Dr.",name:"Chukwudi Michael",middleName:"Michael",surname:"Egbuche",slug:"chukwudi-michael-egbuche",fullName:"Chukwudi Michael Egbuche",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/332819/images/14624_n.jpg",biography:"I an Dr. Chukwudi Michael Egbuche. I am a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Parasitology and Entomology, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Nnamdi Azikiwe University",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"284232",title:"Mr.",name:"Nikunj",middleName:"U",surname:"Tandel",slug:"nikunj-tandel",fullName:"Nikunj Tandel",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/284232/images/8275_n.jpg",biography:'Mr. Nikunj Tandel has completed his Master\'s degree in Biotechnology from VIT University, India in the year of 2012. He is having 8 years of research experience especially in the field of malaria epidemiology, immunology, and nanoparticle-based drug delivery system against the infectious diseases, autoimmune disorders and cancer. He has worked for the NIH funded-International Center of Excellence in Malaria Research project "Center for the study of complex malaria in India (CSCMi)" in collaboration with New York University. The preliminary objectives of the study are to understand and develop the evidence-based tools and interventions for the control and prevention of malaria in different sites of the INDIA. Alongside, with the help of next-generation genomics study, the team has studied the antimalarial drug resistance in India. Further, he has extended his research in the development of Humanized mice for the study of liver-stage malaria and identification of molecular marker(s) for the Artemisinin resistance. At present, his research focuses on understanding the role of B cells in the activation of CD8+ T cells in malaria. Received the CSIR-SRF (Senior Research Fellow) award-2018, FIMSA (Federation of Immunological Societies of Asia-Oceania) Travel Bursary award to attend the IUIS-IIS-FIMSA Immunology course-2019',institutionString:"Nirma University",institution:{name:"Nirma University",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"334383",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Simone",middleName:"Ulrich",surname:"Ulrich Picoli",slug:"simone-ulrich-picoli",fullName:"Simone Ulrich Picoli",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/334383/images/15919_n.jpg",biography:"Graduated in Pharmacy from Universidade Luterana do Brasil (1999), Master in Agricultural and Environmental Microbiology from Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (2002), Specialization in Clinical Microbiology from Universidade de São Paulo, USP (2007) and PhD in Sciences in Gastroenterology and Hepatology (2012). She is currently an Adjunct Professor at Feevale University in Medicine and Biomedicine courses and a permanent professor of the Academic Master\\'s Degree in Virology. She has experience in the field of Microbiology, with an emphasis on Bacteriology, working mainly on the following topics: bacteriophages, bacterial resistance, clinical microbiology and food microbiology.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universidade Feevale",country:{name:"Brazil"}}},{id:"229220",title:"Dr.",name:"Amjad",middleName:"Islam",surname:"Aqib",slug:"amjad-aqib",fullName:"Amjad Aqib",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/229220/images/system/229220.png",biography:"Dr. Amjad Islam Aqib obtained a DVM and MSc (Hons) from University of Agriculture Faisalabad (UAF), Pakistan, and a PhD from the University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences Lahore, Pakistan. Dr. Aqib joined the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery at UAF for one year as an assistant professor where he developed a research laboratory designated for pathogenic bacteria. Since 2018, he has been Assistant Professor/Officer in-charge, Department of Medicine, Manager Research Operations and Development-ORIC, and President One Health Club at Cholistan University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Bahawalpur, Pakistan. He has nearly 100 publications to his credit. His research interests include epidemiological patterns and molecular analysis of antimicrobial resistance and modulation and vaccine development against animal pathogens of public health concern.",institutionString:"Cholistan University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences",institution:null},{id:"62900",title:"Prof.",name:"Fethi",middleName:null,surname:"Derbel",slug:"fethi-derbel",fullName:"Fethi Derbel",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/62900/images/system/62900.jpeg",biography:"Professor Fethi Derbel was born in 1960 in Tunisia. He received his medical degree from the Sousse Faculty of Medicine at Sousse, University of Sousse, Tunisia. He completed his surgical residency in General Surgery at the University Hospital Farhat Hached of Sousse and was a member of the Unit of Liver Transplantation in the University of Rennes, France. He then worked in the Department of Surgery at the Sahloul University Hospital in Sousse. Professor Derbel is presently working at the Clinique les Oliviers, Sousse, Tunisia. His hospital activities are mostly concerned with laparoscopic, colorectal, pancreatic, hepatobiliary, and gastric surgery. He is also very interested in hernia surgery and performs ventral hernia repairs and inguinal hernia repairs. He has been a member of the GREPA and Tunisian Hernia Society (THS). During his residency, he managed patients suffering from diabetic foot, and he was very interested in this pathology. For this reason, he decided to coordinate a book project dealing with the diabetic foot. Professor Derbel has published many articles in journals and collaborates intensively with IntechOpen Access Publisher as an editor.",institutionString:"Clinique les Oliviers",institution:null},{id:"300144",title:"Dr.",name:"Meriem",middleName:null,surname:"Braiki",slug:"meriem-braiki",fullName:"Meriem Braiki",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/300144/images/system/300144.jpg",biography:"Dr. Meriem Braiki is a specialist in pediatric surgeon from Tunisia. She was born in 1985. She received her medical degree from the University of Medicine at Sousse, Tunisia. She achieved her surgical residency training periods in Pediatric Surgery departments at University Hospitals in Monastir, Tunis and France.\r\nShe is currently working at the Pediatric surgery department, Sidi Bouzid Hospital, Tunisia. Her hospital activities are mostly concerned with laparoscopic, parietal, urological and digestive surgery. She has published several articles in diffrent journals.",institutionString:"Sidi Bouzid Regional Hospital",institution:null},{id:"229481",title:"Dr.",name:"Erika M.",middleName:"Martins",surname:"de Carvalho",slug:"erika-m.-de-carvalho",fullName:"Erika M. de Carvalho",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/229481/images/6397_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Oswaldo Cruz Foundation",country:{name:"Brazil"}}},{id:"186537",title:"Prof.",name:"Tonay",middleName:null,surname:"Inceboz",slug:"tonay-inceboz",fullName:"Tonay Inceboz",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/186537/images/system/186537.jfif",biography:"I was graduated from Ege University of Medical Faculty (Turkey) in 1988 and completed his Med. PhD degree in Medical Parasitology at the same university. I became an Associate Professor in 2008 and Professor in 2014. I am currently working as a Professor at the Department of Medical Parasitology at Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir, Turkey.\n\nI have given many lectures, presentations in different academic meetings. I have more than 60 articles in peer-reviewed journals, 18 book chapters, 1 book editorship.\n\nMy research interests are Echinococcus granulosus, Echinococcus multilocularis (diagnosis, life cycle, in vitro and in vivo cultivation), and Trichomonas vaginalis (diagnosis, PCR, and in vitro cultivation).",institutionString:"Dokuz Eylül University",institution:{name:"Dokuz Eylül University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"71812",title:"Prof.",name:"Hanem Fathy",middleName:"Fathy",surname:"Khater",slug:"hanem-fathy-khater",fullName:"Hanem Fathy Khater",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/71812/images/1167_n.jpg",biography:"Prof. Khater is a Professor of Parasitology at Benha University, Egypt. She studied for her doctoral degree, at the Department of Entomology, College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, University of Missouri, Columbia, USA. She has completed her Ph.D. degrees in Parasitology in Egypt, from where she got the award for “the best scientific Ph.D. dissertation”. She worked at the School of Biological Sciences, Bristol, England, the UK in controlling insects of medical and veterinary importance as a grant from Newton Mosharafa, the British Council. Her research is focused on searching of pesticides against mosquitoes, house flies, lice, green bottle fly, camel nasal botfly, soft and hard ticks, mites, and the diamondback moth as well as control of several parasites using safe and natural materials to avoid drug resistances and environmental contamination.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Banha University",country:{name:"Egypt"}}},{id:"99780",title:"Prof.",name:"Omolade",middleName:"Olayinka",surname:"Okwa",slug:"omolade-okwa",fullName:"Omolade Okwa",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/99780/images/system/99780.jpg",biography:"Omolade Olayinka Okwa is presently a Professor of Parasitology at Lagos State University, Nigeria. She has a PhD in Parasitology (1997), an MSc in Cellular Parasitology (1992), and a BSc (Hons) Zoology (1990) all from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria. She teaches parasitology at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. She was a recipient of a Commonwealth fellowship supported by British Council tenable at the Centre for Entomology and Parasitology (CAEP), Keele University, United Kingdom between 2004 and 2005. She was awarded an Honorary Visiting Research Fellow at the same university from 2005 to 2007. \nShe has been an external examiner to the Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Parasitology, University of Ibadan, MSc programme between 2010 and 2012. She is a member of the Nigerian Society of Experimental Biology (NISEB), Parasitology and Public Health Society of Nigeria (PPSN), Science Association of Nigeria (SAN), Zoological Society of Nigeria (ZSN), and is Vice Chairperson of the Organisation of Women in Science (OWSG), LASU chapter. She served as Head of Department of Zoology and Environmental Biology, Lagos State University from 2007 to 2010 and 2014 to 2016. She is a reviewer for several local and international journals such as Unilag Journal of Science, Libyan Journal of Medicine, Journal of Medicine and Medical Sciences, and Annual Research and Review in Science. \nShe has authored 45 scientific research publications in local and international journals, 8 scientific reviews, 4 books, and 3 book chapters, which includes the books “Malaria Parasites” and “Malaria” which are IntechOpen access publications.",institutionString:"Lagos State University",institution:{name:"Lagos State University",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"273100",title:"Dr.",name:"Vijay",middleName:null,surname:"Gayam",slug:"vijay-gayam",fullName:"Vijay Gayam",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/273100/images/system/273100.jpeg",biography:"Dr. Vijay Bhaskar Reddy Gayam is currently practicing as an internist at Interfaith Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He is also a Clinical Assistant Professor at the SUNY Downstate University Hospital and Adjunct Professor of Medicine at the American University of Antigua. He is a holder of an M.B.B.S. degree bestowed to him by Osmania Medical College and received his M.D. at Interfaith Medical Center. His career goals thus far have heavily focused on direct patient care, medical education, and clinical research. He currently serves in two leadership capacities; Assistant Program Director of Medicine at Interfaith Medical Center and as a Councilor for the American\r\nFederation for Medical Research. As a true academician and researcher, he has more than 50 papers indexed in international peer-reviewed journals. He has also presented numerous papers in multiple national and international scientific conferences. His areas of research interest include general internal medicine, gastroenterology and hepatology. He serves as an editor, editorial board member and reviewer for multiple international journals. His research on Hepatitis C has been very successful and has led to multiple research awards, including the 'Equity in Prevention and Treatment Award” from the New York Department of Health Viral Hepatitis Symposium (2018) and the 'Presidential Poster Award” awarded to him by the American College of Gastroenterology (2018). He was also awarded 'Outstanding Clinician in General Medicine” by Venus International Foundation for his extensive research expertise and services, perform over and above the standard expected in the advancement of healthcare, patient safety and quality of care.",institutionString:"Interfaith Medical Center",institution:{name:"Interfaith Medical Center",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"93517",title:"Dr.",name:"Clement",middleName:"Adebajo",surname:"Meseko",slug:"clement-meseko",fullName:"Clement Meseko",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/93517/images/system/93517.jpg",biography:"Dr. Clement Meseko obtained DVM and PhD degree in Veterinary Medicine and Virology respectively. He has worked for over 20 years in both private and public sectors including the academia, contributing to knowledge and control of infectious disease. Through the application of epidemiological skill, classical and molecular virological skills, he investigates viruses of economic and public health importance for the mitigation of the negative impact on people, animal and the environment in the context of Onehealth. \r\nDr. Meseko’s field experience on animal and zoonotic diseases and pathogen dynamics at the human-animal interface over the years shaped his carrier in research and scientific inquiries. He has been part of the investigation of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza incursions in sub Saharan Africa and monitors swine Influenza (Pandemic influenza Virus) agro-ecology and potential for interspecies transmission. He has authored and reviewed a number of journal articles and book chapters.",institutionString:"National Veterinary Research Institute",institution:{name:"National Veterinary Research Institute",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"158026",title:"Prof.",name:"Shailendra K.",middleName:null,surname:"Saxena",slug:"shailendra-k.-saxena",fullName:"Shailendra K. Saxena",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRET3QAO/Profile_Picture_2022-05-10T10:10:26.jpeg",biography:"Professor Dr. Shailendra K. Saxena is a vice dean and professor at King George's Medical University, Lucknow, India. His research interests involve understanding the molecular mechanisms of host defense during human viral infections and developing new predictive, preventive, and therapeutic strategies for them using Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), HIV, and emerging viruses as a model via stem cell and cell culture technologies. His research work has been published in various high-impact factor journals (Science, PNAS, Nature Medicine) with a high number of citations. He has received many awards and honors in India and abroad including various Young Scientist Awards, BBSRC India Partnering Award, and Dr. JC Bose National Award of Department of Biotechnology, Min. of Science and Technology, Govt. of India. Dr. Saxena is a fellow of various international societies/academies including the Royal College of Pathologists, United Kingdom; Royal Society of Medicine, London; Royal Society of Biology, United Kingdom; Royal Society of Chemistry, London; and Academy of Translational Medicine Professionals, Austria. He was named a Global Leader in Science by The Scientist. 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She is a professor in the Stomatology Faculty, St. Petersburg State University. She has expertise in the development and evaluation of a wide range of live mucosal vaccines against influenza and bacterial complications. 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Govindarajan completed his BSc degree in Zoology at Government Arts College (Autonomous), Kumbakonam, and MSc, MPhil, and PhD degrees at Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar, Tamil Nadu, India. He is serving as an assistant professor at the Department of Zoology, Annamalai University. His research interests include isolation, identification, and characterization of biologically active molecules from plants and microbes. He has identified more than 20 pure compounds with high mosquitocidal activity and also conducted high-quality research on photochemistry and nanosynthesis. He has published more than 150 studies in journals with impact factor and 2 books in Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany. He serves as an editorial board member in various national and international scientific journals.",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"274660",title:"Dr.",name:"Damodar",middleName:null,surname:"Paudel",slug:"damodar-paudel",fullName:"Damodar Paudel",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/274660/images/8176_n.jpg",biography:"I am DrDamodar Paudel,currently working as consultant Physician in Nepal police Hospital.",institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"241562",title:"Dr.",name:"Melvin",middleName:null,surname:"Sanicas",slug:"melvin-sanicas",fullName:"Melvin Sanicas",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/241562/images/6699_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:null},{id:"337446",title:"Dr.",name:"Maria",middleName:null,surname:"Zavala-Colon",slug:"maria-zavala-colon",fullName:"Maria Zavala-Colon",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"338856",title:"Mrs.",name:"Nur Alvira",middleName:null,surname:"Pascawati",slug:"nur-alvira-pascawati",fullName:"Nur Alvira Pascawati",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universitas Respati Yogyakarta",country:{name:"Indonesia"}}},{id:"441116",title:"Dr.",name:"Jovanka M.",middleName:null,surname:"Voyich",slug:"jovanka-m.-voyich",fullName:"Jovanka M. Voyich",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Montana State University",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"330412",title:"Dr.",name:"Muhammad",middleName:null,surname:"Farhab",slug:"muhammad-farhab",fullName:"Muhammad Farhab",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Agriculture Faisalabad",country:{name:"Pakistan"}}},{id:"349495",title:"Dr.",name:"Muhammad",middleName:null,surname:"Ijaz",slug:"muhammad-ijaz",fullName:"Muhammad Ijaz",position:null,profilePictureURL:"//cdnintech.com/web/frontend/www/assets/author.svg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences",country:{name:"Pakistan"}}}]}},subseries:{item:{id:"95",type:"subseries",title:"Urban Planning and Environmental Management",keywords:"Circular economy, Contingency planning and response to disasters, Ecosystem services, Integrated urban water management, Nature-based solutions, Sustainable urban development, Urban green spaces",scope:"