寻找解脱:开发一种测试选择性暴露于政治信息的情绪调节解释

IF 4 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Filip Kiil
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然选择性曝光对民主的运作非常重要,但对其原因却没有达成共识。最常见的因果解释是避免认知失调,但对这一解释的直接实证测试非常罕见,而且通常不支持。此外,尽管认知失调回避涉及情绪状态的调节,但这一解释尚未与情绪调节过程及其在塑造政治态度和行为中的作用的最新研究相结合。我进行了这样的理论整合,并得出了认知失调在形成选择性暴露中的作用的情绪调节账户的可测试含义。我在两个原始的、预先注册的调查实验中对4864名美国成年人进行了测试,并将这些结果与来自另一种解释(信息效用)的期望一起进行了测试。我一直在实验测试和三分之二的观察分析中发现支持情绪调节的说法。信息效用的另一种解释在观察分析中得到支持,但在实验测试中没有得到支持。该研究首次提供了将情绪调节与选择性暴露联系起来的实验证据,并表明人们确实会选择志同道合的来源来下调负面情绪。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Looking for relief: Developing an testing the emotion‐regulation explanation of selective exposure to political information
Abstract Though selective exposure is immensely important for the functioning of democracy, no consensus exists as to its cause. The most frequently assumed causal explanation is cognitive dissonance avoidance, but direct empirical tests of this explanation are incredibly rare and have generally not been supportive. Furthermore, although cognitive dissonance avoidance concerns regulation of emotional states, this explanation has not yet been integrated with the newest research on emotion‐regulation processes and their role in shaping political attitudes and behavior. I perform such a theoretical integration and derive testable implications of the emotion‐regulation account of the role of cognitive dissonance in shaping selective exposure. I test these together with expectations derived from an alternative explanation (informational utility), in two, original, preregistered survey experiments with 4864 U.S. adults combined. I consistently find support for the emotion‐regulation account in experimental tests and in two out of three observational analyses. The alternative explanation of informational utility finds support in observational analyses, but not in the experimental tests. The study provides the first experimental evidence linking emotion regulation and selective exposure and suggests that people do, indeed, select like‐minded sources to downregulate negative emotion.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
6.50%
发文量
70
期刊介绍: Understanding the psychological aspects of national and international political developments is increasingly important in this age of international tension and sweeping political change. Political Psychology, the journal of the International Society of Political Psychology, is dedicated to the analysis of the interrelationships between psychological and political processes. International contributors draw on a diverse range of sources, including clinical and cognitive psychology, economics, history, international relations, philosophy, political science, political theory, sociology, personality and social psychology.
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