Self-Awareness of Political Knowledge

被引:0
作者
Matthew H. Graham
机构
[1] Yale University,Department of Political Science
来源
Political Behavior | 2020年 / 42卷
关键词
Public opinion; Political knowledge; Factual beliefs; False beliefs; Misperceptions; Metacognition;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite widespread concern over false beliefs about politically-relevant facts, little is known about how strongly Americans believe their answers to poll questions. I propose a conceptual framework for characterizing survey responses about facts: self-awareness, or how well people can assess their own knowledge. I measure self-awareness of political knowledge by eliciting respondent certainty about answers to 24 factual questions about politics. Even on “unfavorable” facts that are inconvenient to the respondent’s political party, more-certain respondents are more likely to answer correctly. Because people are somewhat aware of their ignorance, respondents usually describe their incorrect responses as low-certainty guesses, not high-certainty beliefs. Where misperceptions exist, they tend to be bipartisan: Democrats and Republicans perform poorly on the same questions and explain their answers using similar points of reference.
引用
收藏
页码:305 / 326
页数:21
相关论文
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