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We describe and test two process models of candidate evaluation. The memory-based model holds that evaluations are dependent on the mix of pro and con information retrieved from memory. The impression-driven model holds that evaluations are formed and updated “on-line” as information is encountered. The results provide evidence for the existence of stereotyping and projection biases that render the mix of evidence available in memory a nonveridical representation of the information to which subjects were exposed. People do not rely on the specific candidate information available in memory. Rather, consistent with the logic of the impression-driven processing model, an “on-line” judgment formed when the information was encountered best predicts candidate evaluation. The results raise both methodological and substantive challenges to how political scientists measure and model the candidate evaluation process.
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Milton Lodge
Stony Brook University
Kathleen M. McGraw
Northwestern University
Patrick J. Stroh
State University of New York
American Political Science Review
State University of New York
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Analyzing shared references across papers
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Lodge et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/690d80df2a906175c9a044f6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/1962397