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re: Nervous people 'are likely to be right-wing'

Posted by:
steven_stuart 11:07 pm UTC 09/21/08
In reply to: Nervous people 'are likely to be right-wing' - JimmyG 10:46 pm UTC 09/21/08

Sarah Palin doesn't look very nervous to me. Have you seen her hunting photographs? I want Obama to win but I don't think anything would scare Palin. The survey investigated only 46 people. I think they should have used a much larger study group.

>
>
> http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/nervous-people-are-likely-to-be-rightwing-935417.html
>
> People who are easily startled by loud bangs or gruesome
> pictures are more likely to vote for right-wing policies
> compared to calmer people who take a more liberal approach
> to life, according to a psychological study of political
> beliefs.
>
> The findings support the idea that personality type
> influences political attitude, which could explain why
> voting differences appear to be entrenched. "Although
> political views have been thought to arise largely from
> individuals' experiences, recent research suggests a
> possible biological basis. We present evidence that
> variations in political attitudes correlate with
> psychological traits," said John Hibbing of the University
> of Nebraska-Lincoln.
>
> The study, published in the journal Science, investigated
> 46 Americans with strong opinions spanning the political
> spectrum who were tested for their physiological responses
> to a range of visually threatening pictures and loud
> noises.
>
> "Subjects with measurably lower physical sensitivities to
> sudden noises and threatening images were more likely to
> support foreign aid, liberal immigration policies,
> pacifism and gun control," Dr Hibbing said.
>
> "Whereas individuals displaying measurably higher
> physiological reactions to those same stimuli were more
> likely to favour defence spending, capital punishment,
> patriotism and the Iraq war," he said. Physiological
> responses that were monitored included the electrical
> conductivity of the skin – measuring sweat production –
> and the amount of eye-blinking after a loud noise. Such
> responses are not under conscious control and are
> considered good indicators of a person's overall nervous
> disposition.
>
> They were shown three threatening images – a large spider
> on a frightened face, a dazed individual covered in blood
> and an open wound filled with maggots – interspersed with
> neutral images and three non-threatening images, such as a
> bowl of fruit and a happy child.
>
> The scientists believe the findings support the belief
> that political attitudes reflect the way a person deals
> with potential threats. "Consequently, our research
> provides one possible explanation for both the lack of
> malleability in the beliefs of individuals with strong
> political convictions and for the associated ubiquity of
> political conflict," they said.


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