Supplemental Material for: Shrout et al (2022) Measuring openness to political pluralism. Journal of Social and Political Psychology.
Openness to Political Pluralism
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Shrout, Patrick
Abstract / Description
In an era of increased political polarization, it is important to measure how receptive US American citizens are to diverse political views. Being more open to diverse political viewpoints—openness to political pluralism—may involve holding emotional and intellectual tolerance, non-rigidity, and proactive motivation to seek out different political perspectives. In three preregistered studies of US residents, we present a new self-report measure of openness to political pluralism (OPP) consisting of 25 items. In Study 1 (MTurk n = 400), we verified a preregistered bifactor model with four facets, conducted initial validity analyses, and created a short five-item version (OPPS). Both OPP and OPPS have high internal consistency and test-retest reliability. In Studies 2 and 3, MTurk participants (n = 258) and Qualtrics panel participants (n = 296) completed OPP and measures of related constructs to validate our scale. OPP was modestly correlated with actively open-minded thinking (AOT) and highly correlated with open-minded cognition-political (OMC-P). Greater OPP was associated with an inverted U-shape relation to left-right political orientation. It was also correlated with more politically diverse social networks and varied information seeking. We discuss how our measure of openness to political pluralism can be used in future research.
Supplemental Material for: Shrout, P. E., Mogami, M., Xu, Q., Ghodse-Elahi, Y., Mutter, E., Riccio, M. T., Valshtein, T. J., Baadan, V., & Goudarzi, S. (2022). Measuring Openness to Political Pluralism. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 10(2), 624-642. https://doi.org/10.5964/jspp.7867
Keyword(s)
political psychology Individual differences measurement openness political psychology individual differences measurement openness informationPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2022-09-08
Publisher
PsychArchives
Is referenced by
Citation
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Shrout_et_al_2022_Other_SUPPL.pdfAdobe PDF - 303.24KBMD5: f9e2955ddf75004a3f2aa7e0df65a93bDescription: Text and Tables Supplementing ArticleRationale for choice of sharing level: We invite others to use items from the Openness to Political Pluralism measure, but we do not want others to claim the items are their own.
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Shrout, Patrick
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2022-09-08T15:38:55Z
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Made available on2022-09-08T15:38:55Z
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Date of first publication2022-09-08
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Abstract / DescriptionIn an era of increased political polarization, it is important to measure how receptive US American citizens are to diverse political views. Being more open to diverse political viewpoints—openness to political pluralism—may involve holding emotional and intellectual tolerance, non-rigidity, and proactive motivation to seek out different political perspectives. In three preregistered studies of US residents, we present a new self-report measure of openness to political pluralism (OPP) consisting of 25 items. In Study 1 (MTurk n = 400), we verified a preregistered bifactor model with four facets, conducted initial validity analyses, and created a short five-item version (OPPS). Both OPP and OPPS have high internal consistency and test-retest reliability. In Studies 2 and 3, MTurk participants (n = 258) and Qualtrics panel participants (n = 296) completed OPP and measures of related constructs to validate our scale. OPP was modestly correlated with actively open-minded thinking (AOT) and highly correlated with open-minded cognition-political (OMC-P). Greater OPP was associated with an inverted U-shape relation to left-right political orientation. It was also correlated with more politically diverse social networks and varied information seeking. We discuss how our measure of openness to political pluralism can be used in future research.en
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Abstract / DescriptionSupplemental Material for: Shrout, P. E., Mogami, M., Xu, Q., Ghodse-Elahi, Y., Mutter, E., Riccio, M. T., Valshtein, T. J., Baadan, V., & Goudarzi, S. (2022). Measuring Openness to Political Pluralism. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 10(2), 624-642. https://doi.org/10.5964/jspp.7867en
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Publication statusacceptedVersionen
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Review statuspeerRevieweden
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7460
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.8167
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchivesen
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Is referenced byhttps://doi.org/10.5964/jspp.7867
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Is related tohttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7979
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Is related tohttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7647
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Keyword(s)political psychologyen
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Keyword(s)Individual differencesen
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Keyword(s)measurementen
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Keyword(s)opennessen
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Keyword(s)political psychologyen
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Keyword(s)individual differencesen
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Keyword(s)measurementen
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Keyword(s)opennessen
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Keyword(s)informationen
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleSupplemental Material for: Shrout et al (2022) Measuring openness to political pluralism. Journal of Social and Political Psychology.en
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Alternative titleOpenness to Political Pluralismen
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DRO typeotheren