Partisans report different perceptions from the same set of facts. According to the “perceptual screen” hypothesis, this difference arises because partisans perceive different realities. An alternative hypothesis is that partisans take even fact-based questions as an opportunity to voice support for their team. In 2009, Gerber and Huber conducted the first behavioral test of the perceptual screen hypothesis outside of the lab. I re-analyze Gerber and Huber’s original data and collect new data from two additional U.S. elections. Gerber and Huber’s finding of a relationship between partisanship and economic behavior does not hold when observations from a single state-year (Texas in 1996) are excluded from their analysis. Out-of-sample replication based on the two U.S. presidential elections since the original study similarly shows no evidence of an effect. Given these results, the balance of evidence tips toward the conclusion that economic perceptions are not filtered through partisanship.
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20 February 2017
Research Article|
February 20 2017
Economic Behavior and the Partisan Perceptual Screen Available to Purchase
Mary C. McGrath
Mary C. McGrath
Department of Political Science,
Northwestern University
, Evanston, IL, USA
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*I would like to thank Alan Gerber and Greg Huber for making their data publicly available for replication and for their support of this work. Don Green provided guidance throughout the research process. Peter Aronow, John Bullock, David Mayhew, and Pia Raffler gave valuable feedback.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2017 M. C. McGrath
2017
M. C. McGrath
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2017) 11 (4): 363–383.
Citation
McGrath MC (2017), "Economic Behavior and the Partisan Perceptual Screen". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 11 No. 4 pp. 363–383, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00015100
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