Talaifar Sanaz, Jordan Diana, Gosling Samuel D, Harari Gabriella M
Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, Imperial College London.
Department of Political Science, Duke University.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2025 Jul;129(1):152-180. doi: 10.1037/pspp0000545. Epub 2025 May 5.
Socializing, moving, working, and leisure form the foundation of human experience. We examined whether these foundational, ostensibly nonpolitical behaviors are nevertheless bifurcated along political fault lines, revealing "lifestyle polarization." Study 1 quantified the association between political identity and 61 social, movement, work, and leisure behaviors collected from smartphone sensors and logs (i.e., GPS, microphone, calls, texs, unlocks, activity recognition) and ecological momentary assessments (i.e., querying activity level, activity type, interaction partners, locations) at multiple temporal levels (i.e., daily, mornings, afternoon, evenings, nights, weekends, weekdays) in a sample of up to 1,229 students on a college campus. We found that liberals and conservatives behave differently in everyday life; the behavioral differences were small but robust, not accounted for by other plausible factors (e.g., demographics), and most pronounced in the leisure domain. Study 2 showed that the behavioral differences between liberals and conservatives were not accurately discerned by other students, who overestimated the extent of lifestyle polarization present on their campus. Together, these studies suggest that political identity has penetrated some of the most foundational aspects of everyday life, but not to the degree that people think. We discuss how communities may feel divided not only because of deep ideological disagreements across partisan lines but also because such disagreements are accompanied by distinct lifestyles-both real and (mis)perceived-that may prevent liberals and conservatives from engaging in cross-partisan contact and developing mutual understanding. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
社交、活动、工作和休闲构成了人类体验的基础。我们研究了这些看似非政治化的基础性行为是否会沿着政治分歧线出现分化,从而揭示出“生活方式两极分化”。研究1量化了政治身份与从智能手机传感器和日志(即全球定位系统、麦克风、通话、短信、解锁、活动识别)以及生态瞬时评估(即询问活动水平、活动类型、互动伙伴、地点)中收集的61种社交、活动、工作和休闲行为之间的关联,这些行为涉及多个时间层面(即每日、上午、下午、晚上、夜间、周末、工作日),样本为一所大学校园里多达1229名学生。我们发现,自由派和保守派在日常生活中的行为存在差异;这些行为差异虽小但很明显,无法用其他合理因素(如人口统计学因素)来解释,且在休闲领域最为显著。研究2表明,自由派和保守派之间的行为差异并未被其他学生准确识别,这些学生高估了他们校园中存在的生活方式两极分化程度。综合来看,这些研究表明政治身份已经渗透到日常生活中一些最基础的方面,但程度并没有人们认为的那么深。我们讨论了社区可能会产生分裂感,不仅是因为党派之间存在深刻的意识形态分歧,还因为这些分歧伴随着真实的和(被)误解的不同生活方式,这可能会阻碍自由派和保守派进行跨党派接触并增进相互理解。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)