A bold re-examination of how political attitudes change in response to information.
Many mistakenly believe that it is fruitless to try to persuade those who disagree with them about politics. However, Persuasion in Parallel shows that individuals do, in fact, change their minds in response to information, with partisans on either side of the political aisle updating their views roughly in parallel. This book challenges the dominant view that persuasive information can often backfire because people are supposedly motivated to reason against information they dislike. Drawing on evidence from a series of randomized controlled trials, the book shows that the backfire response is rare to nonexistent. Instead, it shows that most everyone updates in the direction of information, at least a little bit. The political upshot of this work is that the other side is not lost. Even messages we don't like can move us in the right direction.
Author(s): Alexander Coppock
Series: Chicago Studies in American Politics
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 213
City: Chicago
Contents
Chapter 1. Persuasion in Polarized America
Chapter 2. Reinterpreting a Social Psychology Classic
Chapter 3. Definitions and Distinctions
Chapter 4. Research Design
Chapter 5. Persuasion Experiments: Originals, Replications, and Reanalyses
Chapter 6. Persistence and Decay
Chapter 7. Models of Information Processing
Chapter 8. Persuasion Is Possible
Acknowledgments
Appendix
Notes
References
Index