Publication | Closed Access
Ambiguity, Distorted Messages, and Nested Environmental Effects on Political Communication
75
Citations
35
References
1998
Year
Political ProcessPublic OpinionPolitical BehaviorCommunicationSocial SciencesPolitical GamePolitical SciencePolitical CommunicationDistorted MessagesPolitical CognitionMajority InfluenceCommunication StudyPolitical InformationCommunication ResearchGovernment CommunicationPersonal ExperiencePolitical ConversationPolitical AgendaArtsPersuasion
In this paper we are concerned with the clarity of political signals transmitted through political conversation and the accuracy with which those signals are perceived. The social communication of political information is subject to distortion effects that arise due to skewed expectations on the part of the receiver and ambiguous representations on the part of the sender. Indeed, communication that occurs between two citizens might be distorted either by characteristics of the individuals who are transmitting and receiving messages, or by characteristics of the setting in which the information is being transmitted. We argue that the power of majority opinion is magnified by the inferential devices that citizens use to reach judgments in the face of ambiguous political messages and hence the use of a personal experience heuristic gives rise to a political bias that favors the continued dominance of majority opinion.
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