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Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the Running Tally: Partisan Bias in Political Perceptions

Larry M. Bartels
- 01 Jun 2002 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 2, pp 117-150
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TLDR
This paper examined the impact of long-term partisan loyalties on perceptions of specific political figures and events and concluded that partisan bias in political perceptions plays a crucial role in perpetuating and reinforcing sharp differences in opinion between Democrats and Republicans.
Abstract
I examine the impact of long-term partisan loyalties on perceptions of specific political figures and events. In contrast to the notion of partisanship as a simple “running tally” of political assessments, I show that party identification is a pervasive dynamic force shaping citizens' perceptions of, and reactions to, the political world. My analysis employs panel data to isolate the impact of partisan bias in the context of a Bayesian model of opinion change; I also present more straightforward evidence of contrasts in Democrats' and Republicans' perceptions of “objective” politically relevant events. I conclude that partisan bias in political perceptions plays a crucial role in perpetuating and reinforcing sharp differences in opinion between Democrats and Republicans. This conclusion handsomely validates the emphasis placed by the authors of The American Voter on “the role of enduring partisan commitments in shaping attitudes toward political objects.”

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Journal ArticleDOI

Source Cues, Partisan Identities, and Political Value Expression

TL;DR: The authors examined the conditions under which partisan identities shape the positions people express on four political values: equal opportunity, self-reliance, moral traditionalism, and moral tolerance, and found that partisan cues promote horizontal constraint among these values.
Journal ArticleDOI

Partisan Perceptual Bias and the Information Environment

TL;DR: The authors investigated the pervasiveness of perceptual bias outside the domain of performance issues and how individual-level partisan motivation interacts with the information environment and found that people perceive the world in a manner consistent with their political views.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Partisan Brain: An Identity-Based Model of Political Belief.

TL;DR: An identity-based model of belief is proposed for understanding the influence of partisanship on cognitive processes and helps to explain why people place party loyalty over policy, and even over truth.
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Is the Government to Blame? An Experimental Test of How Partisanship Shapes Perceptions of Performance and Responsibility

TL;DR: This paper examined the effect of partisanship on both performance evaluations and responsibility attributions using survey experiments to disentangle the complex causal relationships, and found that partisan loyalties have pervasive effects on responsibility attribution, but somewhat weaker effects on evaluations of perfo...
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Is Deliberative Democracy a Falsifiable Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors advocate abandoning tests of deliberative theory per se and instead developing "middle-range" theories that are each important, specifiable, and falsifiable parts of the deliberative democratic theory.
References
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Book

An Economic Theory of Democracy

Anthony Downs
TL;DR: Downs presents a rational calculus of voting that has inspired much of the later work on voting and turnout as discussed by the authors, particularly significant was his conclusion that a rational voter should almost never bother to vote.
Book

The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion

TL;DR: Zaller as discussed by the authors developed a comprehensive theory to explain how people acquire political information from elites and the mass media and convert it into political preferences, and applied this theory to the dynamics of public opinion on a broad range of subjects, including domestic and foreign policy, trust in government, racial equality, and presidential approval, as well as voting behaviour in U.S. House, Senate and presidential elections.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion.

D. Rucinski
- 01 Feb 1994 - 
TL;DR: The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion by John Zaller (1992) as discussed by the authors is a model of mass opinion formation that offers readers an introduction to the prevailing theory of opinion formation.