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![]() American Journal of Political ScienceVolume 52 Issue 1, Pages 169 - 183 Published Online: 18 Jan 2008 © 2010 Midwest Political Science Association Published on behalf of the Midwest Political Science Association
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 191K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Money, Time, and Political Knowledge: Distinguishing Quick Recall and Political Learning Skills We thank the Center for Political Studies at the University of Michigan and the University Committee on Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences at Princeton University for funding this research. We thank Rick Li, Mike Dennis, Bill McCready, and Vicki Huggins at Knowledge Networks for assistance in programming and implementing the study. We thank Doug Arnold, Larry Bartels, John Brehm, John Bullock, Will Bullock, Michael Delli Carpini, James Druckman, Elisabeth Gerber, Martin Gilens, Jennifer Jerit, Orit Kedar, Jon Krosnick, Yanna Krupnikov, Gabriel Lenz, Adam Levine, Tali Mendelberg, Jesse Menning, Norbert Schwarz, and seminar participants at the Midwest Political Science Association meeting, the American Political Science Association meeting, and Princeton University for helpful advice. Copyright 2008, Midwest Political Science Association ABSTRACTSurveys provide widely cited measures of political knowledge. Do seemingly arbitrary features of survey interviews affect their validity? Our answer comes from experiments embedded in a representative survey of over 1200 Americans. A control group was asked political knowledge questions in a typical survey context. Treatment groups received the questions in altered contexts. One group received a monetary incentive for answering the questions correctly. Another was given extra time. The treatments increase the number of correct answers by 11–24%. Our findings imply that conventional knowledge measures confound respondents' recall of political facts with variation in their motivation to exert effort during survey interviews. Our work also suggests that existing measures fail to capture relevant political search skills and, hence, provide unreliable assessments of what many citizens know when they make political decisions. As a result, existing knowledge measures likely underestimate people's capacities for informed decision making. |
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Access this free virtual issue of Political Psychology that uses psychological theory and methods to explore important questions in political science. | |
Special Issue on David Sears | ![]() |
Political Psychology recently published a special Forum on David O. Sears' Ongoing Contribution to Political Psychology. Wiley-Blackwell is pleased to offer free online access to all the articles from this special journal issue. | |
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