Political Campaigns and Open-Minded Thinking
- 1 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Journal of Politics
- Vol. 68 (4), 931-945
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2508.2006.00481.x
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Striking a Responsive Chord: How Political Ads Motivate and Persuade Voters by Appealing to EmotionsAmerican Journal of Political Science, 2005
- Getting at the truth or getting along: Accuracy- versus impression-motivated heuristic and systematic processing.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1996
- Rationalization and Derivation Processes in Survey Studies of Political Candidate EvaluationAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1994
- Can Participatory Democracy Produce Better Selves? Psychological Dimensions of Habermas's Discursive Model of DemocracyPolitical Psychology, 1993
- Democratic Theory and Self-TransformationAmerican Political Science Review, 1992
- Do Open-Ended Questions Measure "Salient" Issues?Public Opinion Quarterly, 1991
- Candidate Perception in an Ambiguous World: Campaigns, Cues, and Inference ProcessesAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1989
- Closeness, Expenditures, and Turnout in the 1982 U.S. House ElectionsAmerican Political Science Review, 1989
- What Do Open-Ended Questions Measure?Public Opinion Quarterly, 1988
- The Effects of Campaign Spending in Congressional ElectionsAmerican Political Science Review, 1978