From Primary to Presidency: Fake News, False Memory, and Changing Attitudes in the 2016 Election
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Grady, Rebecca Hofstein
Ditto, Peter H.
Loftus, Elizabeth F.
Levine, Linda J.
Greenspan, Rachel Leigh
Relihan, Daniel P.
Abstract / Description
During a contentious primary campaign, people may argue passionately against a candidate they later support during the general election. How do people reconcile such potentially conflicting attitudes? This study followed 602 United States citizens, recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk, at three points throughout the 2016 presidential election investigating how attitudes and preferences changed over time and how people remembered their past feelings. Across political parties, people’s memory for their past attitudes was strongly influenced by their present attitudes; more specifically, those who had changed their opinion of a candidate remembered their past attitudes as being more like their current attitudes than they actually were. Participants were also susceptible to remembering false news events about both presidential candidates. However, they were largely unaware of their memory biases and rejected the possibility that they may have been susceptible to them. Not remembering their prior attitude may facilitate support of a previously disliked candidate and foster loyalty towards a party nominee during a time of disunity by forgetting they ever used to dislike the candidate.
Keyword(s)
election primary memory bias attitudes fake news false memoryPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2022-11-21
Journal title
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Publisher
PsychArchives
Publication status
acceptedVersion
Review status
reviewed
Is version of
Citation
Grady, R. H., Ditto, P. H., Loftus, E. F., Levine, L. J., Greenspan, R. L., & Relihan, D. P. (in press). From primary to presidency: Fake news, false memory, and changing attitudes in the 2016 election [Accepted manuscript]. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. http://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.10019
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Grady_Ditto_Loftus_et_al_2022_Primary_to_presidency_2016_elections_JSPP_AAM.pdfAdobe PDF - 559.34KBMD5: fd2bebac8694fa8337f25c5dc8701891Description: Accepted Manuscript
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Grady, Rebecca Hofstein
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Ditto, Peter H.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Loftus, Elizabeth F.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Levine, Linda J.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Greenspan, Rachel Leigh
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Relihan, Daniel P.
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2022-11-21T09:51:01Z
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Made available on2022-11-21T09:51:01Z
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Date of first publication2022-11-21
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Abstract / DescriptionDuring a contentious primary campaign, people may argue passionately against a candidate they later support during the general election. How do people reconcile such potentially conflicting attitudes? This study followed 602 United States citizens, recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk, at three points throughout the 2016 presidential election investigating how attitudes and preferences changed over time and how people remembered their past feelings. Across political parties, people’s memory for their past attitudes was strongly influenced by their present attitudes; more specifically, those who had changed their opinion of a candidate remembered their past attitudes as being more like their current attitudes than they actually were. Participants were also susceptible to remembering false news events about both presidential candidates. However, they were largely unaware of their memory biases and rejected the possibility that they may have been susceptible to them. Not remembering their prior attitude may facilitate support of a previously disliked candidate and foster loyalty towards a party nominee during a time of disunity by forgetting they ever used to dislike the candidate.en_US
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Publication statusacceptedVersionen_US
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Review statusrevieweden_US
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CitationGrady, R. H., Ditto, P. H., Loftus, E. F., Levine, L. J., Greenspan, R. L., & Relihan, D. P. (in press). From primary to presidency: Fake news, false memory, and changing attitudes in the 2016 election [Accepted manuscript]. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. http://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.10019en_US
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ISSN2195-3325
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7708
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.10019
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Language of contentengen_US
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PublisherPsychArchivesen_US
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Is version ofhttps://doi.org/10.5964/jspp.10203
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Is related tohttp://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.10013
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Keyword(s)electionen_US
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Keyword(s)primaryen_US
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Keyword(s)memory biasen_US
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Keyword(s)attitudesen_US
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Keyword(s)fake newsen_US
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Keyword(s)false memoryen_US
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleFrom Primary to Presidency: Fake News, False Memory, and Changing Attitudes in the 2016 Electionen_US
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DRO typearticleen_US
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Journal titleJournal of Social and Political Psychologyen_US
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Visible tag(s)PsychOpen GOLDen_US
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Visible tag(s)Accepted Manuscripten_US