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Buckingham Fountain-Taste of Chicago-4th of July Weekend
Author: Christopher Davis (csd2012)
Tags: fofs, 360, panorama, chicago, taste, of, chicago, buckingham, fountain, fountain, 4th, july, edge, effect, festival, weekend, summer
Size: 0.30 gigapixels
Added: July 6, 2009
Total Views: 3389

spacer This 360 panorama was taken at 2x33 to minimize edge effect. This was taken at the southeast corner of Buckingham Fountain on the last day of the taste of Chicago Festival, which ends on the 4th of July weekend.
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where RU: Aresty poster 157 - Party Label Rather than Content Drives Agreement with Political Quotes
Author: (Aresty Posters 2009)
Tags: aresty, posters, 2009, undergraduate, rutgers, whereru, infovis, decision, making, psychology, biases, social, political, labeling, effect, cognitive, research
Size: 0.06 gigapixels
Added: May 19, 2009
Total Views: 309

spacer Party Politics: Party Label Rather than Content Drives Agreement with Political Quotes

ABSTRACT
Political research has long sought to understand the forces that drive how voters choose the candidates they support. Indeed, party affiliation has been shown to be a reliable indicator of voter preference (Campbell et. al., 1960). But how strong is the influence of party identification on the electorate. We conducted a web-based questionnaire study to examine how influential partisan labels affected voter decision making. 174 participants first placed themselves on a continuum of party identification ranging from strongly Republican to strongly Democrat. They then rated their agreement with 15 quotes from actual politicians during the 2008 US Presidential campaign. For each participant, one third of the quotes were correctly labeled with the party it represented, one third were incorrectly labeled (i.e. a quote from a Democratic candidate was labeled ?Republican?), and one third which had no label. Counterbalanced across subjects, each quote appeared in each of the three conditions. We predicted that the party label would affect how much the participants agreed with the content of the quote. The results revealed a labeling effect such that participants showed higher agreement for quotes that were labeled with the party that they favored than for quotes labeled with the opposing party, regardless of whether the labeling was correct. Quotes with no label received neutral ratings. This finding has far reaching implications, especially in instances where group associations take precedence over support for the fundamental principles underlying the association in the first place.


Contact: Gretchen Chapman, Ph.D at gbc@rci.rutgers.edu
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