“…An alternative position has highlighted individual differences in personality traits between left‐leaning progressives and right‐leaning conservatives and has claimed that these differences underlie biases in information processing (Feather, ; Jost, ; Jost, Glaser, Kruglanski, & Sulloway, ; Mooney, ; Thórisdóttir & Jost, ). There is ample evidence that conservatives exhibit greater levels of negativity bias and perceived threat (e.g., Carraro, Castelli, & Macchiella, ; Fessler, Pisor, & Holbrook, ; Hibbing, Smith, & Alford, ) as well as greater need for certainty and ambiguity intolerance (e.g., Fibert & Ressler, ; Jost, ) and lower open‐mindedness (e.g., Carney, Jost, Gosling, & Potter, ; Price, Ottati, Wilson, & Kim, ). Jost and colleagues (Jost, ; Jost et al, ) argue that attitudes and beliefs are not, as suggested by the cultural cognition thesis, passively absorbed from one’s sociocultural context, but that an individual tends to actively adopt attitudes that resonate with their personality.…”