Monday, August 11, 2014

Voting for a personality: Do first impressions and self-evaluations affect voting decisions?

 2014 Aug;51(100):62-68.

Voting for a personality: Do first impressions and self-evaluations affect voting decisions?

Author information

  • Department of Anthropology/Human Behavior Research, University of Vienna, Austria.

Abstract

Participants were asked to assess their own personality (i.e. Big Five scales), the personality of politicians shown in brief silent video clips, and the probability that they would vote for these politicians. Response surface analyses (RSA) revealed noteworthy effects of self-ratings and observer-ratings of openness, agreeableness, and emotional stability on voting probability. Furthermore, the participants perceived themselves as being more open, more agreeable, more emotionally stable, and more extraverted than the average politician. The study supports previous findings that first impressions affect decision making on important issues. Results also indicate that when only nonverbal information is available people prefer political candidates they perceive as having personality traits they value in themselves.

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