希望总是获胜,直到赢家是不可避免的:动机推理和信仰偏见在选举中调节情绪

IF 4 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
P. Thibodeau, M. Peebles, D. Grodner, F. Durgin
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引用次数: 34

摘要

偏见是如何影响政治信息处理的?沃森选择任务的一个变种,用来测试确认偏差,用来描述最近美国总统选举的动态如何影响人们对政治信息的推理。参与者被要求在2012年总统大选之前或之后立即评估专家式的有条件陈述,比如“在任者总是在失业率下降的那一年获胜”。意识形态、预测赢家(命题预测奥巴马还是罗姆尼获胜)和测试时间之间的三方互动表明,偏见对推理的复杂影响。在大选之前,有部分证据表明有动机的推理——当权威人士预测罗姆尼将获胜时,自由派在寻找虚假信息方面表现得特别好。选举结束后,一旦结果已知,就有证据表明存在信念偏见——人们试图伪造与现实世界结果不一致的言论,而不是他们的意识形态。这些结果表明,人们在对政治预测进行推理时,会试图隐性地调节情绪。在选举之前,人们喜欢认为他们喜欢的候选人会获胜。在选举之后,人们喜欢认为胜利者是必然的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Wished‐For Always Wins Until the Winner Was Inevitable All Along: Motivated Reasoning and Belief Bias Regulate Emotion During Elections
How do biases affect political information processing? A variant of the Wason selection task, which tests for confirmation bias, was used to characterize how the dynamics of the recent U.S. presidential election affected how people reasoned about political information. Participants were asked to evaluate pundit-style conditional claims like “The incumbent always wins in a year when unemployment drops” either immediately before or immediately after the 2012 presidential election. A three-way interaction between ideology, predicted winner (whether the proposition predicted that Obama or Romney would win), and the time of test indicated complex effects of bias on reasoning. Before the election, there was partial evidence of motivated reasoning—liberals performed especially well at looking for falsifying information when the pundit's claim predicted Romney would win. After the election, once the outcome was known, there was evidence of a belief bias—people sought to falsify claims that were inconsistent with the real-world outcome rather than their ideology. These results suggest that people seek to implicitly regulate emotion when reasoning about political predictions. Before elections, people like to think their preferred candidate will win. After elections, people like to think the winner was inevitable all along.
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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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