Issue frames are a central concept in studying public opinion, and are thought to operate by foregrounding related considerations in citizens’ minds. But scholarship has yet to consider the breadth of framing effects by testing whether frames influence attitudes beyond the specific issue they highlight. For example, does a discussion of terrorism affect opinions on proximate issues like crime or even more remote issues like poverty? By measuring the breadth of framing effects, we can assess the extent to which citizens’ political considerations are cognitively organized by issues. We undertake a population-based survey experiment with roughly 3,300 respondents which includes frames related to terrorism, crime, health care, and government spending. The results demonstrate that framing effects are narrow, with limited but discernible spillover on proximate, structurally similar issues. Discrete issues not only organize elite politics but also exist in voters’ minds, a finding with implications for studying ideology as well as framing.
Assessing the Breadth of Framing Effects
*The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of Time-sharing Experiments in the Social Sciences, a project overseen by co-PIs James N. Druckman and Jeremy Freese and funded by the National Science Foundation. This project was approved by the Georgetown University Institutional Review Board (2011-299). The authors appreciate insightful comments and/or advice from Kevin Arceneaux, Amber Boydstun, David Broockman, John Bullock, Kevin Collins, D.J. Flynn, Seth Goldman, Gabriel Lenz, Alex Coppock, Rob Kurzban, Matt Levendusky, Diana Mutz, Hans Noel, Erik Peterson, David Yokum, and participants at a 2015 panel of the Midwest Political Science Association’s Annual Meeting. They also express their thanks to Julia Christensen, Patrick Gavin, Douglas Kovel, Eric Mooring, Owen O’Hare, Gabrielle Rothschild, and Elena Zhou for their tireless research assistance. The authors likewise thank the QJPS editors and anonymous reviewers for their very helpful feedback.
Hopkins DJ, Mummolo J (2017), "Assessing the Breadth of Framing Effects". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 12 No. 1 pp. 37–57, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00015139
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