Political Psychology and Media Influence: Key Theories and Concepts

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Last updated 7:15 AM on 11/13/25
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70 Terms

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Somatic Marker Hypothesis

Bodily emotions ("gut feelings") unconsciously guide political and moral decision-making.

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Affective Intelligence

Theory proposing two emotional systems—dispositional (routine, positive) and surveillance (anxiety-based)—that shape political learning and action.

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Cognitive Appraisal Theory

Suggests emotions result from people's cognitive evaluations of events; emotion follows interpretation.

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Hot Cognition

The idea that all political objects are emotionally charged, so affective reactions occur before rational thought.

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Emotion vs. Cognition

Emotion is fast, intuitive, and bodily; cognition is deliberate and reasoned—both interact in politics.

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Dispositional vs. Surveillance System

Dispositional system supports habitual political behavior; surveillance system activates learning under threat or uncertainty.

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Anger

Increases motivation for action and blame but can reduce openness to new information.

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Anxiety

Promotes information-seeking and careful evaluation of politics under uncertainty.

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Fear

Heightens vigilance and defensive attitudes; often leads to support for protective policies.

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Enthusiasm

Encourages turnout and participation, reinforcing prior preferences.

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Blind Retrospection

Voters punish or reward incumbents for events unrelated to government performance (e.g., natural disasters, sports results).

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Genetics and Political Participation

Political engagement and turnout partly influenced by heritable traits and predispositions.

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Civic Duty

The belief that one ought to vote or participate as a moral or social obligation.

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Stress and Political Participation

Higher chronic stress or cortisol levels reduce likelihood of voting and civic engagement.

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Cortisol

A stress hormone that, when elevated, is linked to lower political participation.

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Information Shortcuts

Cognitive heuristics like party ID, ideology, or endorsements used to simplify complex political decisions.

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Opinion Leaders

Informed individuals who interpret and pass on political information to others, guiding less informed voters.

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Candidate Traits

Personal qualities such as competence, honesty, and empathy that influence voter evaluations.

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Party Identification

Long-term psychological attachment to a political party; strongest predictor of vote choice.

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Running Tally Model of Party ID

Party ID evolves as people update opinions based on retrospective evaluations of party performance.

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Perceptual Screen

Party ID filters how individuals perceive and interpret political information (motivated reasoning).

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Turnout

The proportion of eligible citizens who actually vote in an election.

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Field Experiment

Research conducted in real-world settings using random assignment to test causal effects (e.g., voter mobilization).

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Social Pressure

Voter behavior influenced by knowing others may observe or judge their participation (e.g., "Your neighbors voted" mailers).

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Mobilization

Efforts to get supporters to take political action, especially voting.

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Persuasion

Attempts to change people's political attitudes, beliefs, or opinions.

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Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM)

Two paths to persuasion—central (deep processing, lasting change) and peripheral (surface cues, temporary change).

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Persuasion in Parallel

Multiple persuasion processes can operate simultaneously (emotional and rational cues together).

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Consistency Theory (Mobilization)

People strive for consistency between commitments and actions—pledging to vote increases actual turnout.

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Conformity

Changing behavior or beliefs to match group norms or peer expectations.

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Compliance

Behavior change in response to direct requests or social influence.

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Communicator (Persuasion)

The source or messenger; credibility and attractiveness affect persuasion.

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Communication (Persuasion)

The message itself; framing, tone, and emotional appeals matter.

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Target (Persuasion)

The audience; characteristics like prior beliefs and attention determine susceptibility.

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Central Route

Persuasion through thoughtful consideration of arguments; leads to enduring attitude change.

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Peripheral Route

Persuasion via superficial cues (e.g., visuals, slogans); effects are short-term.

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Positive Ads

Promote a candidate's image or record to build support.

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Negative Ads

Attack opponents' character or policies to create doubt or demobilize.

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Contrast Ads

Compare both candidates' positions or traits directly.

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Mobilization Hypothesis

Negative ads can increase engagement by heightening interest and anger.

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Demobilization Hypothesis

Negative ads reduce turnout by increasing cynicism and discouragement.

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Analogic Perspective Taking

Asking people to recall personal experiences to empathize with others, used effectively in Broockman & Kalla (2016).

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Hostile Media Effect

Perception that neutral media coverage is biased against one's own side.

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Episodic vs. Thematic Frames

Episodic frames focus on individual cases; thematic frames emphasize broader social context.

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Media Bias

Systematic slant in news coverage—through selection, tone, or emphasis—that favors certain perspectives.

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Media Usage Patterns in the US

Americans consume political information mainly via TV and increasingly social media, often selectively.

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Framing Effect

How information is presented shapes the weight of different considerations in opinion formation.

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Priming

Media emphasis on certain issues increases their importance in evaluating political figures.

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Gatekeeping

Editors or producers deciding which stories are selected for coverage.

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Coverage Bias

Unequal quantity or prominence of coverage among topics or candidates.

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Statement Bias

Differences in tone or favorability within coverage.

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Accessibility Model of Framing

Frames work by making specific considerations more accessible in memory.

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Importance Change Model of Framing

Frames alter how important people perceive certain considerations to be.

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Availability (Framing)

The presence of relevant information in memory for interpretation.

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Accessibility (Framing)

How easily information is retrieved from memory when evaluating issues.

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Applicability (Framing)

The relevance or fit of a consideration to a given issue.

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Moderators of Framing Effects

Individual traits (knowledge, strength of attitudes) that determine how strongly frames influence opinions.

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Priming Effects

When exposure to certain issues changes the criteria people use to judge leaders or policies.

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Satisfice

Making "good enough" political decisions rather than optimal ones due to limited information or effort.

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Priming vs. Framing

Priming affects what people think about; framing affects how they think about it.

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Priming Hypothesis

People rely more on considerations made accessible or salient by recent exposure.

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Infotainment Priming

Entertainment news can subconsciously make certain political traits or issues more salient.

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Subliminal Priming

Exposure to stimuli below conscious awareness influencing attitudes or choices.

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Informational Appeals

Persuasive messages emphasizing facts or evidence rather than emotion.

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Fake News

Intentionally false or misleading information presented as legitimate news.

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Political Content on Social Media

Political posts and news shared online that influence opinions and engagement.

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Echo Chamber

Environment where people are mainly exposed to like-minded views, reinforcing existing beliefs.

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Heterogeneous vs. Homogeneous Network

Diverse networks expose people to cross-cutting views; homogeneous ones reinforce polarization.

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Social Media Comments & Misinformation

User comments can spread and legitimize false information, shaping perception.

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Mobilization on Social Media

Online cues (friends voting, events) that encourage political participation and turnout.