David Schmitz J, Murray Gregg R
1University of Texas of the Permian Basin.
2Augusta University.
Politics Life Sci. 2017 Fall;36(2):60-79. doi: 10.1017/pls.2017.22.
Partisan identification is a fundamental force in individual and mass political behavior around the world. Informed by scholarship on human sociality, coalitional psychology, and group behavior, this research argues that partisan identification, like many other group-based behaviors, is influenced by forces of evolution. If correct, then party identifiers should exhibit adaptive behaviors when making group-related political decisions. The authors test this assertion with citizen assessments of the relative physical formidability of competing leaders, an important adaptive factor in leader evaluations. Using original and novel data collected during the contextually different 2008 and 2012 U.S. presidential elections, as well as two distinct measures obtained during both elections, this article presents evidence that partisans overestimate the physical stature of the presidential candidate of their own party compared with the stature of the candidate of the opposition party. These findings suggest that the power of party identification on political behavior may be attributable to the fact that modern political parties address problems similar to the problems groups faced in human ancestral times.
党派认同是世界各地个人和大众政治行为中的一种基本力量。基于关于人类社会性、联盟心理学和群体行为的学术研究,本研究认为,党派认同与许多其他基于群体的行为一样,受到进化力量的影响。如果这一观点正确,那么党派认同者在做出与群体相关的政治决策时应该表现出适应性行为。作者通过公民对竞争领导人相对身体威慑力的评估来检验这一论断,身体威慑力是领导人评估中的一个重要适应性因素。利用在背景不同的2008年和2012年美国总统选举期间收集的原始且新颖的数据,以及在两次选举中获得的两种不同测量方法,本文提供了证据表明,与反对党候选人的身高相比,党派认同者高估了自己党派总统候选人的身高。这些发现表明,党派认同对政治行为的影响力可能归因于现代政党解决的问题类似于人类祖先时期群体所面临的问题这一事实。