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Article: Study results from Seton Hall University broaden understanding of behavior.(Report)
- Article from:
- Biotech Week
- Article date:
- November 5, 2008
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"This study found that levels of likelihood to vote can be predicted by the third-person effect. Unlike past studies that treated support for censorship as the main consequence of the third-person effect, this study is the first to examine the direct political implications of the process," investigators in the United States report (see also Behavior).
"A judgment task experiment of 340 individuals who were shown four ads from the 2004 Bush and Kerry campaigns yielded support for both the perceptual and behavioral hypotheses. The authors present paternalism as a theoretical rational for this occurrence," wrote G.J. Golan and colleagues, Seton Hall University.
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