Voters prefer political candidates who are currently in office (incumbents) over new candidates (challengers). Using the premise of query theory (Johnson, Häubl & Keinan, 2007), we clarify the underlying cognitive mechanisms by asking whether memory retrieval sequences affect political decision making. Consistent with predictions, Experiment 1 (N = 256) replicated the incumbency advantage and showed that participants tended to first query information about the incumbent. Experiment 2 (N = 427) showed that experimentally manipulating participants’ query order altered the strength of the incumbency advantage. Experiment 3 (N = 713) replicated Experiment 1 and, in additional experimental conditions, showed that the effects of incumbency can be...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
The present research examined the relation between choice preferences in elections and 2 peripheral ...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
Voters prefer political candidates who are currently in office (incumbents) over new candidates (cha...
Voters prefer political candidates who are currently in office (incumbents) over new candidates (cha...
This data package includes the data and materials for the three experiments conducted on the project...
Past studies of elections have shown that candidates whose names were listed at the beginning of a l...
The studies in this dissertation address two fundamental questions in public opinion research: what ...
One of the most prominent claims to emerge from the field of public opinion is that citizens can vot...
This study investigated how individuals' information-processing goals and political expertise affect...
The electoral advantage that incumbent legislators enjoy over challengers in the U.S. Congress has b...
https://kent-islandora.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/ugresearch/2016/2016all/97/thumbnail.jpgRegarding ...
During political campaigns, candidates often change their positions on controversial issues. Does ch...
Hill for his valuable research assistance. A possible explanation for the rise of the incumbency adv...
LaFleur at the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library for assistance gathering data. We also thank ...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
The present research examined the relation between choice preferences in elections and 2 peripheral ...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
Voters prefer political candidates who are currently in office (incumbents) over new candidates (cha...
Voters prefer political candidates who are currently in office (incumbents) over new candidates (cha...
This data package includes the data and materials for the three experiments conducted on the project...
Past studies of elections have shown that candidates whose names were listed at the beginning of a l...
The studies in this dissertation address two fundamental questions in public opinion research: what ...
One of the most prominent claims to emerge from the field of public opinion is that citizens can vot...
This study investigated how individuals' information-processing goals and political expertise affect...
The electoral advantage that incumbent legislators enjoy over challengers in the U.S. Congress has b...
https://kent-islandora.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/ugresearch/2016/2016all/97/thumbnail.jpgRegarding ...
During political campaigns, candidates often change their positions on controversial issues. Does ch...
Hill for his valuable research assistance. A possible explanation for the rise of the incumbency adv...
LaFleur at the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library for assistance gathering data. We also thank ...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...
The present research examined the relation between choice preferences in elections and 2 peripheral ...
This paper proposes an argument that explains incumbency advantage without recurring to the collecti...