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Journal Article

Citation

Mernyk JS, Pink SL, Druckman JN, Willer R. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2022; 119(16): e2116851119.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, National Academy of Sciences)

DOI

10.1073/pnas.2116851119

PMID

35412915

Abstract

SignificanceProminent events, such as the 2021 US Capitol attack, have brought politically motivated violence to the forefront of Americans' minds. Yet, the causes of support for partisan violence remain poorly understood. Across four studies, we found evidence that exaggerated perceptions of rival partisans' support for violence are a major cause of partisans' own support for partisan violence. Further, correcting these false beliefs reduces partisans' support for and willingness to engage in violence, especially among those with the largest misperceptions, and this effect endured for 1 mo. These findings suggest that a simple correction of partisans' misperceptions could be a practical and scalable way to durably reduce Americans' support for, and intentions to engage in, partisan violence.


Language: en

Keywords

conflict; metaperceptions; political polarization; political violence

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