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The political phenotype of the disgust sensitive: Correlates of a new abbreviated measure of disgust sensitivity
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, 48824, MI, USA;2. Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1001 NG, NL;1. Centre for Maternal and Newborn Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK;2. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Sierra Leone Office, c/o Health Poverty Action, 25 Barracks Road, Murray Town, Freetown, Sierra Leone;3. UNICEF Sierra Leone, UNICEF, P.O. Box 221, Freetown, Sierra Leone
Abstract:The fields of political psychology and election studies often live separate lives. One reason has been the difficulty of including long psychological question batteries in the high-quality, representative samples that are the hallmark of election studies. In this study, we examine a novel one-item measure of psychological differences in sensitivity to one particular emotion: disgust. We demonstrate that disgust sensitivity serves as a foundational political difference that colors a very large range of social and political attitudes and behaviors: including ideology, political engagement, reactions towards outgroups, support for government intervention, behavior during a pandemic, and vote choice.
Keywords:Disgust sensitivity  Election study  Ideology  Vote choice  Policy attitudes  Group ratings
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