“…Bearing in mind scholarship, discussed below, that concludes that judges also utilize these two modes of information processing (Guthrie, Rachlinski, and Wistrich ), this assessment becomes even more sensible if one conceives of specialization's influence on judicial decision making as primarily related to motivation. As has been generally noted elsewhere (e.g., Miller and Curry ; Miller and Curry ; Krosnick ; McGraw and Pinney ), specialists tend to be better able and more highly motivated to process information systematically than nonspecialists. “Increases in level[s] of motivation are associated with a greater likelihood of systematic [System 2] processing” (Chen, Duckworth, and Chaiken , 47), and, as noted above, scholars have found the utilization of such processing to be affiliated with ideologically motivated reasoning.…”