Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

34
Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions Lecture 8 Emotion 2: Other models

description

Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions. Lecture 8 Emotion 2: Other models. Program. The impact of mood Motivated political reasoning Anxiety, threat and authoritarianism Emotions and framing Altruism and participation. The impact of mood. Lecture 8 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Page 1: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Political Psychology:Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models

Page 2: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Program

The impact of mood Motivated political reasoning Anxiety, threat and

authoritarianism Emotions and framing Altruism and participation

Page 3: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

The impact of mood

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models

Page 4: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

The impact of mood

Affective state not tied to object.

The nature of the weather has an effect on life satisfaction.

The state of the mood has an effect on evaluations of political candidates.

Page 5: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Motivated political reasoning

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models

Page 6: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Reasoning is motivated– accuracy goals– partisan goals

Hot cognition On-line processing Primacy of affect Biased reasoning

Motivated political reasoning

Page 7: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lodge & Taber (2005)

Page 8: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lodge & Taber (2005)

Page 9: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lodge & Taber (2005)

Page 10: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lodge & Taber (2005)

Page 11: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lodge & Taber (2005)

Page 12: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Lodge & Taber (2005)

Page 13: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Biased processing:– prior attitude bias– disconfirmation bias– confirmation bias

Attitude polarization Conditional on sophistication

and attitude strength

Quality of inform. processing

Page 14: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Taber & Lodge (2006)

Page 15: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Taber & Lodge (2006)

Page 16: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Taber & Lodge (2006)

Page 17: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Taber & Lodge (2006)

Page 18: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Anxiety, threat and authoritarianism

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models

Page 19: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Huddy et al. (2005)

9/11 terrorist attacks on USA

Threat induces authoritarianism

Key mediator is ignored: affect

Perceived threat and anxiety should have different impacts on authoritarian attitudes

Page 20: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Huddy et al. (2005)

Page 21: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Huddy et al. (2005)

Page 22: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Huddy et al. (2005)

Page 23: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Emotions and framing

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models

Page 24: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Problem 1, version 1 Disease is expected to kill 600 persons.

Two response programs are possible.

Program A: 200 persons will be saved.

Program B: 1/3 chance to save 600 persons and 2/3 chance to save no one.

45% prefer A, 55% prefer B

Page 25: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Problem 1, version 2 Disease is expected to kill 600 persons.

Two response programs are possible.

Program A: 400 persons will die.

Program B: 1/3 chance no one will die and 2/3 chance 600 persons will die.

67% prefer A, 34% prefer B

Page 26: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Problem 2, version 1 $3000 community development grant.

Two investment programs are possible.

Program A: community will gain $1000.

Program B: 50% chance community will gain $2000 and 50% chance community will gain nothing.

28% prefer A, 72% prefer B

Page 27: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Problem 2, version 2 $3000 community development grant.

Two investment programs are possible.

Program A: community will lose $1000.

Program B: 50% chance community will lose nothing and 50% chance community will lose $2000.

66% prefer A, 34% prefer B

Page 28: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Druckman & McDermott

Page 29: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Druckman & McDermott

Page 30: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Druckman & McDermott

Page 31: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Altruism and participation

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models

Page 32: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Fowler & Kam (2007)

Do concerns for others affect political participation?

Two social concerns:

– social identification

– altruism

Measured by dictator game

Page 33: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Fowler & Kam (2007)

Page 34: Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions

Conclusion

Lecture 8

Emotion 2: Other models