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Replication Data for: When and Why Are Campaigns' Persuasive Effects Small? Evidence from the 2020 US Presidential Election

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NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-13 收录
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https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/LLPKNG
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资源简介:
Why do political campaigns so often fail to persuade voters, and what does this say about voter decision-making? Some interpret the difficulty of persuading voters as evidence that voters remain loyal to their parties even when confronted with new information. However, an informational (quasi-Bayesian) mechanism may also contribute. We test empirical implications of these alternatives with four survey experiments (total n=113,742) conducted during the 2020 Presidential election that exposed individuals to 291 messages. Our results support the quasi-Bayesian interpretation: we show that voters are more persuadable with information about candidates they know less about; that persuasive messages change both candidate evaluations and vote choices, and induce partisan defection; and that messages with more informational content are more persuasive. These results suggest voters reacting to information in a manner consistent with Bayesian updating, and not only partisan loyalty, can help explain variation in and the small size of campaign effects.
创建时间:
2022-05-02
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