Abstract:Participants read a positive or negative (mock) political advertisement that was sponsored by either an in‐group (subject and sponsor were members of the same political party) or an out‐group (subject and sponsor were members of different political parties) member. The results found support for a black‐sheep effect. An in‐group sponsor of a positive advertisement was evaluated more positively than any out‐group member, regardless of advertisement type, or an in‐group member who sponsored a negative advertiseme… Show more
“…The findings here are similarly mixed. Some research suggests that citizens support candidates who attack at lower levels (Shapiro and Rieger 1992;Weaver-Lariscy and Tinkham 1996;Matthew and Dietz-Uhler 1998;Lemert et al 1999;Min 2004;Brader 2005) whereas other research implies just the opposite: that citizens are less supportive of candidates who use negative messages (Roddy and Garramone 1988;Ansolabehere and Iyengar 1995;Kaid 1997;Shen and Wu 2002;King and McConnell 2003).…”
Section: Public Opinion and Campaign Negativitymentioning
Scholars have spent a great deal of effort examining the effects of negative advertising on citizens' perceptions of candidates. Much of this work has used experimental designs and has produced mixed findings supporting one of two competing theories. First, negative ads may harm candidates who sponsor them because citizens tend to dislike negativity. Second, negativity may drive down citizens' support for the targeted candidate because the attacks give people reasons to reject the target. We argue that the mixed findings produced by prior research may be driven by a disregard for campaign dynamics. We present a critical test of these two theories using data drawn from 80 statewide elections-37 gubernatorial and 43 U.S. Senate contests-from three election years and public opinion polling collected during the last 12 weeks of each campaign. We find that a candidate's support declines as her advertising strategy includes a higher proportion of negative ads relative to her opponent and that this process unfolds slowly over the course of the campaign.
“…The findings here are similarly mixed. Some research suggests that citizens support candidates who attack at lower levels (Shapiro and Rieger 1992;Weaver-Lariscy and Tinkham 1996;Matthew and Dietz-Uhler 1998;Lemert et al 1999;Min 2004;Brader 2005) whereas other research implies just the opposite: that citizens are less supportive of candidates who use negative messages (Roddy and Garramone 1988;Ansolabehere and Iyengar 1995;Kaid 1997;Shen and Wu 2002;King and McConnell 2003).…”
Section: Public Opinion and Campaign Negativitymentioning
Scholars have spent a great deal of effort examining the effects of negative advertising on citizens' perceptions of candidates. Much of this work has used experimental designs and has produced mixed findings supporting one of two competing theories. First, negative ads may harm candidates who sponsor them because citizens tend to dislike negativity. Second, negativity may drive down citizens' support for the targeted candidate because the attacks give people reasons to reject the target. We argue that the mixed findings produced by prior research may be driven by a disregard for campaign dynamics. We present a critical test of these two theories using data drawn from 80 statewide elections-37 gubernatorial and 43 U.S. Senate contests-from three election years and public opinion polling collected during the last 12 weeks of each campaign. We find that a candidate's support declines as her advertising strategy includes a higher proportion of negative ads relative to her opponent and that this process unfolds slowly over the course of the campaign.
“…Reversals, however, of in-group favoritism have been reported. When one seriously violates the group norms, several studies report that the in-group may assess this behavior even more harshly than it would that of a non-group member (Barry et al, 2006;Begue, 2001;Mathews and Dietz-Uhler, 1998).…”
“…This appears to stem from a desire to protect a positive group identity-and thus self-identity (Tajfel and Turner 1986)-from the negative behaviors of an in-group member. Matthews and Dietz-Uhler (1998) found this dynamic at work in negative advertising. In an experiment using mock political ads, they found that participants had more negative affective and behavioral reactions to ads alleging that the opponent ''did not support family values in his personal and professional life'' (Matthews andDietz-Uhler 1998, p. 1906) when the sponsor belonged to the same party as the participant.…”
Section: Advertising Tone and Targetmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Matthews and Dietz-Uhler (1998) found this dynamic at work in negative advertising. In an experiment using mock political ads, they found that participants had more negative affective and behavioral reactions to ads alleging that the opponent ''did not support family values in his personal and professional life'' (Matthews andDietz-Uhler 1998, p. 1906) when the sponsor belonged to the same party as the participant. Matthews and Dietz-Uhler (1998) suggested that ''the backlash effect described by many researchers may be a manifestation of the black sheep effect' ' (p. 1905).…”
Section: Advertising Tone and Targetmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In an experiment using mock political ads, they found that participants had more negative affective and behavioral reactions to ads alleging that the opponent ''did not support family values in his personal and professional life'' (Matthews andDietz-Uhler 1998, p. 1906) when the sponsor belonged to the same party as the participant. Matthews and Dietz-Uhler (1998) suggested that ''the backlash effect described by many researchers may be a manifestation of the black sheep effect' ' (p. 1905). But if so, one generally would expect to see the strongest backlash among partisans of the attacker, which is the opposite of what others describe (Ansolabehere and Iyengar 1995, Faber et al 1990, Merritt 1984.…”
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