Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
about
Do Political and Economic Choices Rely on Common Neural Substrates? A Systematic Review of the Emerging Neuropolitics LiteratureAlteration of Political Belief by Non-invasive Brain Stimulation.Routes of motivation: stable psychological dispositions are associated with dynamic changes in cortico-cortical functional connectivityNeuromodulation of group prejudice and religious belief.Associations between parental ideology and neural sensitivity to cognitive conflict in children.Caring across boundaries versus keeping boundaries intact: links between moral values and interpersonal orientations.Moralized Rationality: Relying on Logic and Evidence in the Formation and Evaluation of Belief Can Be Seen as a Moral Issue.Shifting liberal and conservative attitudes using moral foundations theory.An Exploration of the Differential Effects of Parents' Authoritarianism Dimensions on Pre-school Children's Epistemic, Existential, and Relational Needs.The "chicken-and-egg" problem in political neuroscience.The Neuroscience of Intergroup Relations: An Integrative Review.Visual re-identification of individual objects: a core problem for organisms and AI.Shaking the tyrant's bloody robe.For Better or Worse? System-Justifying Beliefs in Sixth-Grade Predict Trajectories of Self-Esteem and Behavior Across Early Adolescence.The biological roots of political extremism.Are leftists more emotion-driven than rightists? The interactive influence of ideology and emotions on support for policies.A multilevel social neuroscience perspective on radicalization and terrorism.Likes Attract: The Sociopolitical Groupthink of (Social) Psychologists.Differences in negativity bias underlie variations in political ideology.Conservatism and liberalism predict performance in two nonideological cognitive tasks.The politics of color: preferences for Republican red versus Democratic blue.Investigating the origins of political views: biases in explanation predict conservative attitudes in children and adults.The politics of attention contextualized: gaze but not arrow cuing of attention is moderated by political temperament.Can Information Decrease Political Polarization? Evidence From the U.S. Taxpayer ReceiptToxic Talk: How Online Incivility Can Undermine Perceptions of MediaGulliver’s PoliticsFor whom will the Bayesian agents vote?Candidate Vulnerability and Exposure to Counterattitudinal Information: Evidence From Two U.S. Presidential ElectionsPartisan Paths to Exposure Diversity: Differences in Pro- and Counterattitudinal News ConsumptionSelective Exposure: New Methods and New DirectionsThe negative effect of red tape on procedural satisfaction
P2860
Q26768565-0EE2E519-5138-4FFF-A8E4-CFCCDA0CBFE1Q27317230-060FC970-2D33-4E38-BEE0-F98F64719F77Q33706050-7E781FE7-6CC8-423F-A6FD-4D744790505DQ34672776-0B3D7C75-07DD-4286-88A5-14A40E3917C7Q35044548-148F385A-0691-4FC0-9DDE-EBB5D805694DQ35069684-6F250730-DBB3-46C7-9A4E-5753373A0B77Q36193996-CF50F247-4951-435D-A0F2-5C175FF56080Q36873946-E0DC7918-B598-4C26-B945-4048B6C11DA0Q37574789-EC44BC2F-5D78-4C24-A3D6-655441CF039BQ38223713-0CB205BF-3375-4BCF-9BE1-8D44452F12B6Q38546881-6CBD2351-752D-430D-AA69-16145DAE289DQ38602691-2C662D7C-BB2E-4D65-A7F4-F4383B6DD489Q38885949-0CE02467-7342-4DE3-A377-C4C174101CA0Q40479919-9BB513CC-76DD-473B-B2F2-AFFE836430B7Q47556500-B06BC892-17CC-42E0-B914-355A06303C7CQ47589809-6DA53942-D50B-4820-B5ED-37FB0CF2BFD3Q47631616-5A068B13-AE70-4F93-B33F-7BBC5EAB15CEQ47962580-29DCEEBA-C0AF-4453-A51B-8377B4C0DEF3Q48692611-B080152E-035F-4476-B571-5CC3ED18A4ACQ49886936-5C09FA2B-2974-4B0F-94C5-630EAD568DF2Q50223588-AE5294D3-7229-4625-8621-398DC9C72434Q50573996-43ED931E-255E-4CB5-8954-3AC199827B42Q50583289-44171E2B-8E2B-47D5-8C32-E3728C7B08D7Q56341212-2D589963-066F-41E4-9D09-6301920275CEQ57751421-936ECDF2-EC9F-450D-8B1D-ED30673CE007Q58454539-1C51390B-4328-49F0-B80D-BA36EED8BF5DQ58561553-AB2BA439-9470-4301-92D8-F8D2425FD479Q58655940-681C4427-56A1-4216-ADC8-CA694C455D12Q58655958-9B99F1E1-02E8-4C4A-B539-BCF7DCEF2198Q58655962-537C20D7-03E5-4C2E-BE30-19046C83ED78Q58943536-ABBC1C58-862C-481F-8055-C193AA5E4DE5
P2860
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
description
article
@en
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в листопаді 2011
@uk
ലേഖനം
@ml
name
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@en
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@nl
type
label
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@en
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@nl
prefLabel
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@en
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@nl
P2860
P1476
Political ideology as motivated social cognition: Behavioral and neuroscientific evidence
@en
P2093
David M. Amodio
John T. Jost
P2860
P2888
P356
10.1007/S11031-011-9260-7
P577
2011-11-13T00:00:00Z