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ID174455
Title ProperNegativity Biases and Political Ideology
Other Title Informationa comparative test across 17 countries
LanguageENG
AuthorFournier, Patrick ;  PATRICK FOURNIER
Summary / Abstract (Note)There is a considerable body of work across the social sciences suggesting negativity biases in human attentiveness and decision-making. Recent research suggests that individual variation in negativity biases is correlated with political ideology: persons who have stronger physiological reactions to negative stimuli, this work argues, hold more conservative attitudes. However, such results have mostly been encountered in the United States. Does the link between psychophysiological negativity biases and political ideology apply elsewhere? We answer this question with the most extensive cross-national psychophysiological study to date. Respondents across 17 countries and six continents were exposed to negative and positive televised news reports and static images. Sensors tracked participants’ skin conductance, and a survey captured their left–right political orientation. Analyses performed at three levels of aggregation—respondent-as-a-case, stimuli-as-a-case, and second-by-second time-series—fail to find strong support for the link between negativity biases and political ideology.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 114, No.3; Aug 2020: p.775 - 791
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review Vol: 114 No 3
Key WordsPolitical Ideology ;  Negativity Biases ;  Comparative Test across 17 Countries


 
 
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