School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2018 Apr 10;13(4):e0193909. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193909. eCollection 2018.
In political campaigns, perceived candidate credibility influences the persuasiveness of messages. In campaigns aiming to influence people's beliefs, micro-targeted campaigns (MTCs) that target specific voters using their psychological profile have become increasingly prevalent. It remains open how effective MTCs are, notably in comparison to population-targeted campaign strategies. Using an agent-based model, the paper applies recent insights from cognitive models of persuasion, extending them to the societal level in a novel framework for exploring political campaigning. The paper provides an initial treatment of the complex dynamics of population level political campaigning in a psychologically informed manner. Model simulations show that MTCs can take advantage of the psychology of the electorate by targeting voters favourable disposed towards the candidate. Relative to broad campaigning, MTCs allow for efficient and adaptive management of complex campaigns. Findings show that disliked MTC candidates can beat liked population-targeting candidates, pointing to societal questions concerning campaign regulations.
在政治竞选中,候选人的可信度会影响信息的说服力。在旨在影响人们信仰的竞选活动中,利用选民心理特征进行微目标定位的竞选活动(MTC)越来越普遍。目前尚不清楚 MTC 的效果如何,尤其是与针对目标人群的竞选策略相比。本文使用基于代理的模型,应用说服认知模型的最新研究成果,在一个新颖的框架中扩展到社会层面,以探索政治竞选活动。本文以一种受心理学启发的方式,初步探讨了人口层面政治竞选的复杂动态。模型模拟结果表明,MTC 可以通过针对对候选人持有利态度的选民来利用选民心理。与广泛的竞选活动相比,MTC 允许对复杂的竞选活动进行高效和自适应的管理。研究结果表明,不受欢迎的 MTC 候选人可能击败受欢迎的目标人群候选人,这引发了关于竞选活动规则的社会问题。