articleAmerican Political Science ReviewNov 1, 2004Closed access

Political Preference Formation: Competition, Deliberation, and the (Ir)relevance of Framing Effects

University of Minnesota

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Abstract

One of the most contested questions in the social sciences is whether people behave rationally. A large body of work assumes that individuals do in fact make rational economic, political, and social decisions. Yet hundreds of experiments suggest that this is not the case. Framing effects constitute one of the most stunning and influential demonstrations of irrationality. The effects not only challenge the foundational assumptions of much of the social sciences (e.g., the existence of coherent preferences or stable attitudes), but also lead many scholars to adopt alternative approaches (e.g., prospect theory). Surprisingly, virtually no work has sought to specify the political conditions under which framing…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Framing (construction)
  • Deliberation
  • Positive economics
  • Politics
  • Irrationality
  • Rationality
  • Framing effect
  • Social psychology
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