The Public Sphere Is “Too Darn Hot”: Social Identity Complexity as a Basis for Authentic Communication

Jennifer S Brundidge
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Abstract

A growing body of research suggests that the contemporary media environment enables motivated reasoning, which intensifies affective polarization. This is especially the case in the U.S., where elections are capital-intensive and media are largely commercially owned. From a normative perspective, these commercial forces may interfere with authentic communication by hijacking the “lifeworld” and thus undermining the sincerity of our speech. From a psychological and empirical perspective, this means we are an affective public steeping in “hot cognitions” that unconsciously motivate us toward processing (mis)information in biased and distorted ways. This kind of cognitive limitation intensifies as current affairs heat up, but starts well before, as a function of media market boundaries aligning with human psychology. Through a synthetic literature review of theory and empirical research, this essay argues that “social identity complexity” may help to overcome some of the worst outcomes of motivated reasoning, pointing toward a developmental basis for more authentic communication in the public sphere.
公共领域 "太热了":作为真实交流基础的社会身份复杂性
越来越多的研究表明,当代媒体环境助长了动机推理,从而加剧了情感两极分化。这种情况在美国尤为明显,因为在美国,选举是资本密集型的,媒体也主要是商业性的。从规范的角度来看,这些商业力量可能会通过劫持 "生活世界 "来干扰真实的交流,从而破坏我们言论的真诚性。从心理学和实证的角度来看,这意味着我们是沉浸在 "热点认知 "中的情感型公众,这些 "热点认知 "会无意识地促使我们以偏颇和扭曲的方式处理(错误)信息。这种认知限制会随着时事的升温而加剧,但早在此之前就已经开始了,这是媒体市场边界与人类心理相一致的结果。通过对理论和实证研究的综合文献回顾,本文认为 "社会身份复杂性 "可能有助于克服动机推理的一些最坏结果,为在公共领域进行更真实的交流奠定发展基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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