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Afraid of whom?

Threat sensitivity’s influence changes with perceived source of threat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2022

Nicolas M. Anspach*
Affiliation:
York College of Pennsylvania
*
Corresponding author: Nicolas M. Anspach, York College of Pennsylvania. Email: nanspach@ycp.edu
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Abstract

Taking insights from the fields of psychology and biology, a growing body of scholarship considers the psychophysiological foundations of political attitudes. Subconscious emotional reactions to threat, for example, have been shown to predict socially conservative attitudes toward out-groups. However, many of these studies fail to consider different sources of perceived threat. Using a combination of survey and physiological data, I distinguish between fear of others and fear of authority, finding that threat sensitivity predicts divergent political attitudes depending on the strength of each. Those who are more sensitive to threat from others tend to hold socially conservative attitudes, while those who fear authority generally take more libertarian positions. As sensitivity to threat is at least partially inherited, these findings highlight the genetic role of political predispositions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences

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Footnotes

This article earned Open Materials and Open Data badges for open scientific practices. For details, see the Open Scientific Practices Statement.

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