Individual and Contextual Variations in Political Candidate Appraisal
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 88 (1) , 193-199
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2944891
Abstract
In this note we elaborate on the conditions under which on-line and memory-based strategies of political candidate evaluation can be implemented. We suggest that the structure of information may be an important contextual variable affecting the voter's choice of these strategies. In addition, we propose that citizens with less political sophistication are particularly sensitive to structural differences in the political information environment. We use an experimental design that manipulates the information-processing context to test these ideas. Our results suggest that the context in which information is presented plays a critical role in moderating the influence of individual differences in political sophistication.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effects of Television Videographics and Lecture Familiarity on Adult Cardiac Orienting Responses and MemoryCommunication Research, 1992
- Thirty Seconds or Thirty Minutes: What Viewers Learn from Spot Advertisements and Candidate DebatesJournal of Communication, 1990
- Involuntary Attention and Physiological Arousal Evoked by Structural Features and Emotional Content in TV CommercialsCommunication Research, 1990
- An Impression-Driven Model of Candidate EvaluationAmerican Political Science Review, 1989
- Measuring Political SophisticationAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1987
- The relationship between memory and judgment depends on whether the judgment task is memory-based or on-line.Psychological Review, 1986
- Individual construct accessibility, person memory, and the recall-judgment link: The case of information overload.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1985
- MESSAGE COMPLEXITY AND ATTENTION TO TELEVISIONCommunication Research, 1985
- Social Cognition: A Look at Motivated StrategiesAnnual Review of Psychology, 1985
- The Measurement of Public Opinion about Public Policy: A Report on Some New Issue Question FormatsAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1982