Strong and Weak Opinions Define (Republican) Primaries
Most news about the 2012 Republican primaries has focused on which candidates are faring well in which states. This focus on the levels of support for each of the Republican candidates misses a...
View ArticleDo You Trust the Supreme Court?
With the nation’s highest court deciding one of the most important legal cases in recent history, it is no surprise that it is making headlines. Despite a deep divide in public opinion over health...
View ArticleAmerican Ephebiphobia
Culture is obsessed with youth: beauty treatments curb the signs of aging, literature evokes the innocence of youth, and young love is glorified for its lack of complication. But views of youths...
View ArticleHas Health Care Polarized Voters?
The puzzling thing about the apparent divide in Americans' opinions about health care reform is that people are actually not divided about health care reform.
View ArticleMisinformation on the Mind
Death panels, socialism, the end of Medicare. Misinformation about health care is abundant, and that isn’t the only area where U.S. politics churns up a lot of misperceptions. Who’s to blame when we...
View ArticleBorn That Way: Do Our Genes Determine Our Politics?
A search is underway for a genetic basis of political ideology and behavior. Despite the efforts and media hype, it is unclear what’s been found. Are we born liberal and conservative?
View ArticleAll Politics Is Genetic?
New evidence suggests political opinions are influenced by our genetics.
View ArticleLies, Damned Lies, and Genetics Statistics
The challenge of determining whether one thing causes another is the mantra of statistics classes, but human frailty at inferring causation makes assessing potential causes difficult.
View ArticleFederalism Internalized?
A poll released this past week by the Pew Research Center finds that (1) there is a growing gap in public perceptions of federal, state, and local governments and (2) there are major partisan divides...
View ArticleThe Pretense of Polarization
So-called “social issues” are often seen as the bread and butter of political polarization: at any one time, large portions of the American electorate are supportive of them while similarly large...
View ArticleFallen Soldiers, Declining Support for War
Public support for the end goals of military conflict – often grand notions of peace, democracy, freedom, security, and so forth – must ultimately come to terms with the costs of war, found in dollars...
View ArticleParties Divided?
For polarization to occur, individuals have to develop more extreme views over the course of their lives or new generations have to hold more extreme and divided political viewpoints than earlier...
View ArticleWisconsin Means Little
The scientific consensus on the Wisconsin recall election is that it means little for national politics. But what, if anything, does it say about psychology?
View ArticleIn Nothing We Trust
What has happened to Americans’ trust? While some might be quick to infer meaningful explanations for declining support in each of these institutions—that television has become too uncivilized or...
View ArticleTSA Moderately Liked, Despite Everything
How could an agency subject to consistently negative publicity and that seems to be loathed by nearly everyone who travels possibly be viewed in a positive light by most Americans?
View ArticleThe Ephemeral Impact of Violent Events
Why don’t violent events change public attitudes toward guns? Popular wisdom, of various kinds, suggests opinions should change. Research on the nature of opinions suggests otherwise.
View ArticlePublic Opinion, Not Just an American Phenomenon
Recent protests across the world in response to an anti-Islamic internet video make clear that everyone around the world has opinions and those opinions matter – not just in their home country but...
View ArticleThinking Fast and Slow in Crisis Politics
The attack on the American diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya has been the subject of considerable political conversation. Media coverage of the attack, and the ensuing response by the candidates,...
View ArticleFinding Common Ground in Divisive Times
We often think that the other side in a political debate is trying to destroy America, or at least offering a dangerous alternative to our own views of the political good. Why do we think these things...
View ArticleWhat Do We See in the Electoral Map?
Some psychoanalysts believe that Rorschach tests tell us about what is going on in our minds and what you see in two different maps of the 2012 election says a lot about how you perceive American...
View ArticleNo Politics at the Dinner Table?
For those with politically compatible social networks, holiday dinner offers a great time for uncontroversial bashing of political opponents. For those who find themselves surrounded by relations with...
View ArticleDo We Really Want Political Compromise?
With the fiscal cliff debate looming large in Washington and on the national news agenda, there is increasing talk of the importance of political compromise. This call for putting aside differences and...
View ArticleMeans, Motive, and Opportunity
If crime is a function of means, motive, and opportunity, then a comprehensive policy response—rather than narrowly targeted policies (gun control) with little public support—seems to be in order.
View ArticleWhen Our Partisan Attachments Let Politicians Fail
The fiscal cliff is a prime example of political leaders shirking their responsibilities – failing to debate and make enlightened policies – and taking advantage of our psychological predispositions...
View ArticleTrusting Government to Kill, Despite Distrusting Government
The public holds views of government activity that largely appear incoherent. This is problematic if we expect democracy to function as a direct translation of public views into policy, but can work if...
View ArticleEmotionally Polarized
Disagreement is the core of politics. If everyone agreed, we would have little societal need for campaigns, elections, or any other democratic institution. But the increasing divisiveness of politics...
View ArticleWhat’s Important?
Media, citizens, and politicians seem to disagree about what is important. Psychological tendencies to over-estimate the similarity of others to one’s self means that the public and politicians are...
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