Selection Neglect and Political Beliefs

Autor: Matthew Brundage, Andrew T. Little, Soo Sun You
Rok vydání: 2022
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/p49at
Popis: Individuals, like researchers, often have to form beliefs about the political world from non-representative samples; e.g., their friends, what they see on TV, or content on social media. Substantial evidence indicates that many struggle to account for this selection problem, and generally form beliefs as if what they observe is representative. In this review, we provide a formal typology of how this phenomenon of selection neglect affects political beliefs. Homophily leads individuals to believe others’ traits and beliefs are closer to their own. The squeaky wheel effect biases beliefs towards more visible or vocal groups. And the man bites dog effect leads to excessive belief in extreme or unusual events. Selection neglect is a unifying way to understand disparate literatures on perceptions of the economy and demographics, beliefs about others beliefs, partisan media, and social media. Much empirical work is consistent with biased beliefs driven by selection neglect, but rarely directly tests this mechanism outside of lab settings. We discuss how future research can provide more direct evidence.
Databáze: OpenAIRE