"Negativity effect" refers to the psychological phenomenon that people tend to attach greater weight to negative information than to equally extreme and equally likely positive information in a variety of information processing tasks. Numerous studies of impression formation have found that negative information is weighted more heavily than positive information as impressions of others are formed. There is empirical evidence in political science that shows the importance of the negativity effects in the information processing of the voters. This effect can explain the observed decrease of popularity for a president the longer he is in office. We construct a dynamic model of political competition, incorporating the negativity effect in the d...
In real-life elections, voters do not have full information over the policy platforms proposed by po...
The current research investigated the effects of negative as compared to positive person-based polit...
This paper studies how voter loss-aversion affects electoral competition in a Downsian setting. Assu...
``Negativity effect'' refers to the psychological phenomenon that peopletend to attach greater weigh...
We construct a dynamic voting model of multiparty competition in order to capture the following fact...
Humans evolved to attend to valence and group membership when learning about their environment. The ...
Negative information has a stronger influence on impressions of others than positive information, a ...
This thematic issue deals with the “negative” side of politics, more specifically with dynamics of p...
This paper studies the effect of voter loss-aversion in preferences over both candidate policy platf...
The fight over setting the political agenda is one of the basic mechanisms of party competition of e...
We study a voting model in which policy motivated candidates competefor the attention of voters, who...
In political psychology, positive projection happens when we perceive the positions of liked candida...
The use of party cues is a fundamental process of how voters adopt policy preferences. While researc...
Political issues are particularly prone to motivated beliefs, as the individual cost of manipulating...
We study loss aversion in elections by investigating a median voter model (full convergence in a two...
In real-life elections, voters do not have full information over the policy platforms proposed by po...
The current research investigated the effects of negative as compared to positive person-based polit...
This paper studies how voter loss-aversion affects electoral competition in a Downsian setting. Assu...
``Negativity effect'' refers to the psychological phenomenon that peopletend to attach greater weigh...
We construct a dynamic voting model of multiparty competition in order to capture the following fact...
Humans evolved to attend to valence and group membership when learning about their environment. The ...
Negative information has a stronger influence on impressions of others than positive information, a ...
This thematic issue deals with the “negative” side of politics, more specifically with dynamics of p...
This paper studies the effect of voter loss-aversion in preferences over both candidate policy platf...
The fight over setting the political agenda is one of the basic mechanisms of party competition of e...
We study a voting model in which policy motivated candidates competefor the attention of voters, who...
In political psychology, positive projection happens when we perceive the positions of liked candida...
The use of party cues is a fundamental process of how voters adopt policy preferences. While researc...
Political issues are particularly prone to motivated beliefs, as the individual cost of manipulating...
We study loss aversion in elections by investigating a median voter model (full convergence in a two...
In real-life elections, voters do not have full information over the policy platforms proposed by po...
The current research investigated the effects of negative as compared to positive person-based polit...
This paper studies how voter loss-aversion affects electoral competition in a Downsian setting. Assu...