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Testing the Robustness of the ANES Feeling Thermometer Indicators of Affective Polarization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 December 2023

MATTHEW TYLER*
Affiliation:
Rice University, United States
SHANTO IYENGAR*
Affiliation:
Stanford University, United States
*
Corresponding author: Matthew Tyler, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Rice University, United States, mdtyler@rice.edu.
Shanto Iyengar, William Robertson Coe Professor and Professor of Political Science and of Communication, Department of Political Science, Stanford University, United States, siyengar@stanford.edu.

Abstract

Affective polarization (AP)—the tendency of political partisans to view their opponents as a stigmatized “out group”—is now a major field of research. Relevant evidence in the United States derives primarily from a single source, the American National Election Studies (ANES) feeling thermometer time series. We investigate whether the design of the ANES produces overestimates of AP. We consider four mechanisms: overrepresentation of strong partisans, selection bias conditional on strong identification, priming effects of partisan content, and survey mode variation. Our analysis uses the first-ever collaboration between ANES and the General Social Survey and a novel experiment that manipulates the amount of political content in surveys. Our tests show that variation in survey mode has caused an artificial increase in the mixed-mode ANES time series, but the general increase in out-party animus is nonetheless real and not merely an artifact of selection bias or priming effects.

Type
Letter
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association

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References

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