Title

Does counter-attitudinal information cause backlash? Results from three large survey experiments.

Summary

This article explores the concept of “backlash,” where exposure to counter-attitudinal evidence is believed to reinforce pre-existing beliefs, leading to stronger opinions. The article formalizes this concept and presents findings from three survey experiments, which show no evidence of backlash, even under conditions that should theoretically provoke it. The results suggest that backlash is much less common than widely assumed, challenging prevailing notions in the literature on information processing.

 

َAuthor

Guess, A., & Coppock, A.

Year

2020

َThematic Area

Communication Studies

Topic

Fake information and Social media

Country

Global

Region

Global

Misinformation Combatting

Cross Cutting

Place Published

APA 7th End Text Citation

Guess, A., & Coppock, A. (2020). Does counter-attitudinal information cause backlash? Results from three large survey experiments. British Journal of Political Science, 50(4), 1497–1515. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123418000327