Elections Are (Not) Exciting: Need for Cognition and Electoral Behaviour

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Abstract

Need for cognition (NFC) is the personality trait that describes differences in the enjoyment of cognitive efforts. By relying on data collected over two elections in Sweden in 2014, I show the trait's multifaceted political relevance. Individuals who enjoy cognitive challenges are more likely to think that it matters what government that is formed after the election, engage with campaign information, favor complex news over simple news and select stronger reasons for vote choice over weaker, e.g., ideology over habit. Overall, the results suggest that election studies would benefit from measuring need for cognition.

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APA

Sohlberg, J. (2019). Elections Are (Not) Exciting: Need for Cognition and Electoral Behaviour. Scandinavian Political Studies, 42(2), 138–150. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9477.12138

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